Coach CJ Ujah Olympics Failed Drug Test – The British runner CJ Ujah has been temporarily suspended for an anti‑doping rule infringement in the wake of testing positive for two prohibited substances subsequent to winning a silver award in the 4x100m transfer at the Tokyo Olympic Games.
The news implies that the Team GB men’s 4x100m transfer group all face being deprived of their decorations, with Canada being moved up to silver and China getting bronze except if Ujah can sufficiently clarify how the substances got into his body.
In the event that the suspension is maintained it would be the greatest doping embarrassment in British Olympic history, and will take a portion of the gleam off Team GB’s 65-award pull in Tokyo. Ujah, in the mean time, would almost certainly confront a four‑year boycott.
Ostarine and S-23 are delegated part of another class of medications called specific androgen receptor modulators (Sarm). They are known to impersonate testosterone by restricting to chemical receptors in explicit pieces of the body.
Ostarine is utilized to treat muscle squandering and osteoporosis, while S‑23 is said to focus on the muscle and bone tissues to advance muscle development and bone wellbeing.
Both are restricted under the World Anti-Doping Agency’s rundown of disallowed substances. In 2017 the US Anti-Doping Agency cautioned competitors that ostarine was showing up in spoiled enhancements.
The International Testing Agency, which gathered Ujah’s example in Tokyo, later affirmed it had come from an in-rivalry test following the 4x100m transfer last.
The AIU said it worked intimately with the ITA during the Games and gave the knowledge to do explicit objective testing on two of the four competitors.
The British men’s group of four of Ujah, Zharnel Hughes, Richard Kilty and Nethaneel Mitchell-Blake passed up the 4x100m title by a hundredth of a second in Tokyo, as the anchor-leg sprinter Mitchell-Blake was updated on the line by Italy’s Filippo Tortu.