TEMPE, Ariz. - The Arizona State track and field program announced their 2016 signing class on Tuesday morning, which includes a thrower, a mid-distance runner and a multi-event athlete. Head coach Greg Kraft and staff are pleased to welcome Samantha Noennig, Herbert Polk and Jessica Barreira. A native to Hartford, Wisc., Noennig is seen as one of the top throwers in the 2016 class. She has competed in the IAAF World Youth Games, USATF WI Junior Olympic Qualifier and USATF World Youth Trials. Polk will transfer from the College of the Sequoias after two seasons competing in the men's 400-meter and 4x400 relay. Coach Kraft expects him to come in and immediately contribute for the Sun Devils. The most recent commit is Jessica Barreira from Portugal. Barreira has been with Sporting Clube de Portugal -- the most decorated sports club in Portugal with 44 sports -- and had been determined to attend a university. Coach Kraft sees her playing a big role in the women's heptathlon and in the jumps. Read more on each commit below and see the Sun Devils 2016 indoor and outdoor schedule here. Samantha Noennig Hometown: Hartford, Wisc. High School: Hartford Union High School Position: Discus, Shot Put Personal Bests: Shot Put - 46'-0", Discus - 161'-6", Hammer Throw - 139'-5" "We are honored that Sam Noennig has decided to join the Sun Devil Track and Field Family," throwing coach David Dumble said. "She is one of the top young throwers in the country in the discus and shot put. Sam has already earned the opportunity to represent the United States in international competition during the World Youth Games. With her tremendous talent and work ethic, she will continue to develop as one of the best throwers in the NCAA. We are excited to have her join the rich tradition of developing spectacular throwers at Arizona State University." Herbert Polk Hometown: Santa Rosa, Calif. Last School: College of the Sequoias Position: 400m, 4x400 Personal Bests: 4x400 - 3:07.10, 400m - 48.07
“Herb will enroll at ASU the 2016 spring semester," head coach Greg Kraft said. "We look for Herb to have an immediate impact on our 4x400 meter relay and to develop into a conference scorer in the 400 meters by the time the MPSF Championships arrive.”
Jessica Barreira Hometown: Odilevas, Lisbon, Portugal Club: Sporting CP Position: Heptathlon, Long Jump, Triple Jump Personal Bests: Heptathlon - 4,942, Triple Jump - 41'-4.06" (indoor), 41'-10.36" (outdoor), Long Jump - 19'-3.89" (indoor), 20'-.16" (outdoor)
"Jessica Barreira will be joining the Sun Devils this January as a multi-event athlete who specializes in the long jump and triple jump," said head coach Greg Kraft. "The 2015 high school graduate from Lisbon, Portugal will be bringing a heptathlon best score of 4,942 to Tempe, along with a long jump best of 20’ ¼” and a triple jump best of 41’ 7”. Jessica is a student-athlete that brings a diverse skill set to our roster that really dovetails nicely with our Pac-12 Championship schedule.”
Mustang Men’s Cross Country Bags Top 10 Finish at NAIA National Championships
By Ryan Freeman, For TMC Sports Information November 21, 2015 Team Results | Individual Results CHARLOTTE, North Carolina – With perfect conditions, The Master’s College men’s cross country team finished ninth out of a field of 36 teams with a collective time of 2:09:43.1 at the 2015 NAIA National Championships at McAlpine Creek Park. Notably, the 15th-ranked Mustangs were just one spot away from tying their highest team finish in program history (8th, 2012). Individually, Josh Sherfey (Stevenson Ranch, CA) clinched 25th overall and earned NAIA All-American honors after finishing the 8k race with a time of 25 minutes and 11 seconds. Sherfey is TMC's men's cross country's first NAIA All-American in three years (John Gilbertson, 2012). In a field of 326 runners, the start of the 8,000 meter race went out hard with the Mustangs fighting for positions. Sherfey navigated to the front of the race around the 15th position and managed to close well with his impressive time of 25:11. Both Michael Sciarra (Orange, CA) and Andrew Orona (Newhall, CA) were not far behind Sherfey by placing 56th (25:47.8) and 69th (25:55.9), respectively. “How we performed today was a great representation of who we are as a team,” commented TMC head coach Zachary Schroeder. “Regardless of the results, our mindset was focused on honoring the Lord with our efforts and I feel we accomplished that task.” As the season closes, the Mustangs will hang up the shoes for two weeks until they begin their winter base training for the approaching 2016 track season.
This Recreation Center's hours are affected over Thanksgiving. On Wednesday, November 25, it opens at its regularly scheduled time, but closes at 5:00 p.m. On Thursday, November 26 it is closed. Regular hours resume on Friday, November 27.
Center Manager: Lauren Primerano Deputy Center Manager: Chris Caropolo, Dan Dunn, Cynthia Bayiokos Phone: (718) 351-7923 Fax: (718) 351-6482
Hours of Operation
Monday - Friday: 6:00 AM - 9:30 PM Saturday - Sunday: 8:30 AM - 3:30 PM
Holidays
On holidays (New Year's Day and Eve, Martin Luther King Day, Presidents Day, Memorial Day, Easter, Independence Day, Labor Day, Columbus Day, Election Day, Veterans Day, Thanksgiving Day and Eve, and Christmas Day and Eve), recreation center hours will change. Please visit our Recreation Center Holiday Schedule for details.
Recreation Center Membership Gift Cards
Give the Gift of Sports, Fitness and Fun! Purchase a Recreation Center Membership Gift Card, and share the joy of health with a family member, friend, or loved one. Gift Cards may be redeemed at any one of Parks' 35 recreation centers across New York City.
Preseason Indoor T&F Rankings Announced for NCAA DII
By Kyle Terwillegar, USTFCCCA
November 25, 2015
NEW ORLEANS – Though the 2016 NCAA Division II Indoor Track & Field Championships are still months away, it’s never too early to get a sneak peak at the 2015-16 season with preseason National Team Computer Rankings. This data was generated using the TFRRS data of 2014-15 student-athletes who were listed with freshman, sophomore or junior eligibility. These do not take into account transfers, redshirts or incoming freshmen. TEAM PDFs:Top 25 Summary | By Team Week By Week PDFs: By Rank | By Week | All-Time INDIVIDUAL PDF: By Event Grand Valley State’s men and women made it a clean sweep atop the rankings to start the 2015-16 season. Based on last year’s returners, the Laker men are sizeable favorites over GLIAC rival No. 2 Tiffin, recent cross country national champions No. 3 Colorado Mines, No. 4 Findlay and No. 5 Saint Augustine’s. Defending national champion Adams State entered at No. 6. The GVSU women are projected as narrow favorites over No. 2 New Mexico Highlands, No. 3 Hillsdale, defending indoor/outdoor national champion No. 4 Central Missouri and No. 5 Lincoln (Mo.). The first regular-season edition of the rankings will be released in January using only marks achieved during the 2015-16 season.
USTFCCCA NCAA Division II
Men’s Indoor Track & Field National Team Computer Rankings (Top 25)
USA’s Ashton Eaton and Ethiopia's Genzebe Dibaba were named the male and female IAAF World Athletes of the Year for 2015 on Thursday (26).
Both athletes set world records during 2015, Eaton in the decathlon and Dibaba in the 1500m, and won gold medals in these events at the IAAF World Championships Beijing 2015.
Ashton Eaton became the first decathlete to win the male World Athlete of the Year award after his spectacular performance in the Chinese capital, his only decathlon of the year, when he set a world record of 9045 and improved his own three-year-old mark by nine points. Notable among his individual events in Beijing was a 45.00 400m at the end of the first day, the fastest one lap of the track ever run within a decathlon.
“Athletes spend the most vigorous years of human life, arguably called the ‘best years’, working to hone their abilities. So, when an athlete competes, what people are witnessing is the manifestation of what a human being is capable of when they choose to direct all of their time and effort towards something.
“I’m grateful and thankful to the IAAF for excellent competitions, the canvases that allow us to display our work.
"While I’m honoured that I am considered the ‘artist’ of the year, I did not beat Usain and Christian; my work simply differed in design. They are some of the most talented and beautiful performers of all time. I’m flattered to be among them.
"I accept this award on behalf of all of us athletes who love what we do.”
Genzebe Dibaba, after setting a world indoor 5000m record of 14:18.86, was then unbeaten in her five 1500m races during the summer. Firstly, she ran an African record of 3:54.11 in Barcelona, the fastest time in the world for almost 12 years, and then topped that with a stunning world record of 3:50.07 in Monaco to beat a mark that had been on the books since 1993. In Beijing, Dibaba was majestic through all three rounds of the 1500m, winning every race comfortably, and she also took a 5000m bronze medal.
“I am humbled and honoured to receive this award from the IAAF," said Dibaba. "It feels so good to be the World Athlete of the Year.
“After being a finalist and narrowly missing out on this award one year ago, I am very proud to be recognised by the fans and experts of our sport.
“I had a great season and truly enjoyed competing around the world, from Monaco where I managed to establish a world record, to Beijing where I finally captured my first world outdoor title.
“I would like to pay tribute to Dafne Schippers and Anita Wlodarczyk who have been incredible all year round. Maybe your time will come next year!
“Thank you to all the people who voted for me and supported me. My family, my sisters, my coaches, my partners, my agents and all the people from Ethiopia!
“My focus in 2016 will be the IAAF World Indoor Championships in Portland and as preparation for that I will try to break the world indoor mile record in Stockholm on 17 February.
“This is a difficult time for our sport and with the Athletes’ Commission we stand together with Sebastian Coe as he deals with the challenges.”
IAAF President Sebastian Coe commented:“While the athletics family is not gathering together as usual in Monaco, we rightly celebrate the marvellous 2015 achievements of the athletes. Foremost, I offer congratulations to our World Athletes of the Year, world champions Ashton Eaton and Genzebe Dibaba. Your performances in 2015 are an inspiration and examples of true sporting excellence.
“A world record when winning a world title is a rare feat and capped two unequalled days of decathlon brilliance from Ashton in Beijing. Genzebe, your win in Beijing was as assured and your 1500m world record a few weeks earlier a run of true grit and determination. We salute you both as we do all our award winners who have been announced today.
“Finally I wish to thank all the athletes, coaches, officials who work tirelessly for our wonderful sport. Our appreciation also goes to the media for relaying the excitement of competition and to the fans watching in stadiums, in homes and on the move around the world. Your enthusiastic support made the IAAF World Championships in Beijing the most talked about sports event of the year.”
How the award was decided
Last month the IAAF Family* was asked to vote for athletes from each of the following categories: sprints, hurdles, middle and long distance, road running, race walking, jumps, throws, combined events and multi-terrain.
The top-voted athletes in each category formed the longlist for the World Athlete of the Year, from which an international panel of 10 experts** selected the three finalists. The panel cast their own vote to determine the IAAF World Athletes of the Year.
Other awards
IAAF RISING STAR AWARD Abdul Hakim Sani Brown (JPN) & Candace Hill (USA)
Sani Brown, 16, took a 100m and 200m sprint double at the IAAF World Youth Championships Cali 2015, winning in championship records of 10.28 and 20.34, both world-youth-leading times.
Hill, also 16, ran a world youth 100m best of 10.98 before then taking a 100m and 200m double in Cali, winning the longer sprint in a world youth best of 22.43.
IAAF GOLDEN SHOE PRESENTED BY ADIDAS Almaz Ayana (ETH)
Almaz Ayana’s triumph over her Ethiopian compatriot and 1500m winner Genzebe Dibaba in the 5000m, with an outstanding display of front running which saw her win by more than 17 seconds in 14:26.33, helped her receive 23.84% of the votes for the performance of the IAAF World Championships Beijing 2015 and she deservedly won the IAAF Golden Shoe Award, presented by Adidas.
IAAF COACHING ACHIEVEMENT AWARD Bart Bennema (NED)
Bennema, 38, is best known as the coach to the multi-talented world 200m champion Dafne Schippers. The Dutch former international decathlete is also the coach to a number of the Netherlands’ other leading athletes, including double 2014 world junior medallist Nadine Visser.
IAAF WORLD JOURNALIST AWARD Pat Butcher (GBR)
Butcher is a writer, journalist, television producer and commentator. He first attended the Olympic Games in 1972. Subsequently, he has covered all IAAF World Championships and Olympic Games as writer and/or commentator since 1980.
MASTERS’ ATHLETES OF THE YEAR David Heath (GBR) & Silke Schmidt (GER)
Former British cross country international Heath won both the M50 800m and 1500m titles at the 2015 WMA World Championships this summer. Heath won the M50 800m exhibition race at the IAAF World Championships Beijing 2015 and set a European M50 800m best of 1:58.72.
Schmidt won four W55 gold medals – 1500m, 5000m, 10,000m and half marathon – at the 2015 WMA World Championships this summer. During 2015, she also ran world best times for her category in the 1500m, mile, 3000m, 5000m, 10,000m and half marathon.
*IAAF Family: IAAF & IAF Council members; IAAF national member federations; IAAF Committee & Commission members; IAAF meeting directors; IAAF athlete ambassadors; athletes’ representatives; top athletes; members of the international press; IAAF staff members and the IAAF’s official partners
**The international panel of athletics experts includes representatives from all six continental areas of the IAAF
Six members of the IAAF Athletes’ Commission have been appointed by IAAF Council.
The six new members who have been appointed to join the Athletes’ Commission for the period 2016-2019 are Fabiana Murer (BRA), Paula Radcliffe (GBR), Alina Talay (BLR), Ashton Eaton (USA), Michael Frater (JAM) and Ezekiel Kemboi (KEN).
A new chairperson will be decided by the commission when they hold their next meeting in January/February 2016 (date tbc.). Frank Fredericks, the out-going chairperson, will continue in an honorary capacity to assist the commission during the transition and in their general contact with the IAAF Council.
IAAF President Sebastian Coe commented:“I welcome the new members who joined the Athletes’ Commission today at a challenging time for our sport. Together our task is to respond to those challenges and rebuild trust in the integrity of competition supporting the aspirations and dreams of the athletes. I would like to express my great appreciation for the continued support and advice given by the commission and its chairperson Frank Fredericks.”
IAAF Athletes’ Commission Chairperson Frank Fredericks commented:“Our commission is composed of a mixture of current and recently retired international athletes from the six continental areas. Today’s six new members will be a huge asset adding to the wide range of experience and knowledge already in the commission. We are working together with Sebastian Coe, united in our resolve to clean up athletics for the sake of the vast majority of clean athletes.”
The IAAF Athletes’ Commission is made up of 18 members, 12 of whom are elected by their peers and six appointed by the IAAF.
The mandate structure of the commission is as follows:
- Six, confirmed for a four-year mandate during the Moscow 2013 IAAF World Championships, whose mandate ends on 31 December 2017;
- Six members (including the Chairperson) have been appointed by the IAAF in November 2011 and nominees shall be appointed on the commission again in November 2015;
- Six, elected during the Daegu 2011 IAAF World Championships, whose mandate shall end on 31 December 2015.
The existing Athletes’ Commission who these six members join:
2016-2019 Valerie Adams (NZL) Mutaz Essa Barshim (QAT) Yelena Isinbayeva (RUS) Andreas Thorkildsen (NOR) Christian Olsson (SWE) Koji Murofushi (JPN)
2013-2017 Hussain Taher Al Sabee (KSA) Tommi Evilä (FIN) Habiba Ghribi (TUN) Jennifer Joyce (CAN) Rozle Prezelj (SLO) Matej Toth (SVK)
Biographies of the new members:
Fabiana Murer The Brazilian pole vaulter won the world indoor title in 2010 and the world title in 2011. Before that, she had taken bronze at the 2008 IAAF World Indoor Championships and more recently she took silver at the IAAF World Championships Beijing 2015. She has set numerous South American records along the way, her best being 4.85m.
Paula Radcliffe After winning the junior title in 1992, the British distance runner went on to win six more medals – including two golds – at the IAAF World Cross Country Championships. But it was on the roads where she achieved her greatest successes. She twice broke the world marathon record, reducing it to 2:15:25, and recorded three victories at both the London and New York marathons. She won the world half marathon title in 2000, 2001 and 2003, and the world marathon title in 2005.
Alina Talay The Belarusian sprint hurdler won her first international title in 2011 at the European Under-23 Championships. The following year she took bronze at the IAAF World Indoor Championships and gold at the European Championships. Following two European indoor titles, Talay took bronze at the IAAF World Championships Beijing 2015.
Ashton Eaton The US combined events athlete first came to global attention in 2010 when he set a world indoor heptathlon record, which he has twice improved upon and currently stands at 6645. After getting the decathlon silver medal at the 2011 IAAF World Championships, he has since won decathlon gold medals at the London 2012 Olympics, as well as at the 2013 and 2015 IAAF World Championships. He also won the 2012 and 2014 world indoor heptathlon titles. Eaton has set two decathlon world records, including the current mark of 9045.
Michael Frater The Jamaican sprinter took silver in the 100m at the 2005 IAAF World Championships in Helsinki. After finishing sixth in that event at the 2008 Olympics, Frater formed part of the victorious Jamaican 4x100m team, setting a world record of 37.10. He took further 4x100m gold medals at the 2009 and 2011 World Championships and the 2012 Olympics, setting two more world records in the process.
Ezekiel Kemboi Kenyan steeplechaser Ezekiel Kemboi struck gold at the 2004 Olympics. After three successive silver medals at the IAAF World Championships, Kemboi won his first world title in 2009. He has since gone on to win three more world titles as well as the Olympic title in 2012.
The full suspension of ARAF and the formation of an IAAF Integrity Unit were confirmed today at the 202nd IAAF Council Meeting in Monaco.
The meeting was chaired by IAAF President Sebastian Coe. Two members were absent: individual member Mikhail Butov (RUS) and African Area Association representative David Okeyo (KEN).
In his opening address Sebastian Coe said:“We must work hard to restore trust and to show the real values and potential of Athletics. We have a unique opportunity now to face the future with optimism. Let us make sure that we have the right people, in the right places and the right structure to take the sport to a better place.”
ARAF SUSPENSION
Council was informed that written confirmation had been received from ARAF accepting their full suspension without requesting a hearing as was their constitutional right.
ARAF confirmed they understood that Council would only accept their reinstatement as an IAAF Member Federation following the recommendation of the IAAF Inspection Team who will decide if the verification criteria have been fulfilled. ARAF also confirmed they will cooperate fully and actively with the team.
Council discussed the process which over the next three weeks will lead to a final set of criteria and the verification process. The plan is to present a detailed list of verification criteria to ARAF by the end of the year.
REALLOCATION OF 2016 COMPETITIONS
Council agreed a process for the reallocation of the two IAAF World Athletics Series competitions - 2016 World Race Walking Team Championships (Cheboksary, RUS) and 2016 World Junior Championships (Kazan, RUS) - which have been removed from Russia due to ARAF’s suspension.
A number of countries have already expressed interest in staging these events. An accelerated bidding process will open next week with a decision in early January.
OTHER MATTERS
Council agreed to the formation of an Integrity Unit to keep Athletics clean and to safeguard the integrity of the IAAF.
Reports were presented to Council from all the IAAF departments.
Sebastian Coe also briefed his colleagues about changes which have taken place in Monaco since he took office as president on 31 August.
The annual contract which provided a permanent serviced apartment in the five star Fairmont Hotel for the President’s use had been cancelled immediately on his taking office.
The IAAF President’s office ‘Villa Miraflores’ has also been closed and handed back to the Principality of Monaco. All IAAF staff personnel formerly based there have now transferred to the IAAF HQ Office on Quai Antoine.
DECLARATION OF INTERESTS
Sebastian Coe encouraged all his Council colleagues to complete their declarations of interest and, as he said he would do, announced the following changes to his registration of interests:
- He has stepped down from his ambassador role with Nike as the current noise level around this ambassadorial role was not good for the IAAF nor Nike.
- He is Chairman of CSM, one of the world's largest sports marketing agencies operating in 19 countries. Although CSM's revenue from athletics is negligible, the company has agreed that it will not tender for, nor directly work for the IAAF, nor any city in relation to their tender to the IAAF while he is President of the IAAF.
- He will step down as Chairman of the British Olympic Association at the conclusion of the Rio 2016 Olympic Games.
DETERMINED TO REPAIR FAILURES AND REBUILD TRUST
Commenting on behalf of the Council, new Council Member Stephanie Hightower said: “We know we need to re build trust with our fans and this will be a long journey.”
“But we also need to show our athletes that we are serious about supporting clean athletes and will not tolerate cheating at any level.”
“The whole system has failed the athletes. We need to better understand the triggers and flags that will enable us to identify problems early and fix them sooner.”
“All my council colleagues are determined to repair the failures and rebuild trust amongst athletes and fans.”
USC Announces Impressive 2015-16 Track & Field Recruiting Class
"Elite 8" features National Gatorade Track & Field Athlete of the Year Norman
Courtesy USC
T.J. Brock won the California state high school 100m title in 2015.
Nov. 26, 2015 LOS ANGELES – Sprinter Michael Norman, sprinter T.J. Brock, hurdler Anna Cockrell, long jumper Courtney Corrin, sprinter Zaria Francis, hurdler Mecca McGlaston and sprinter twins Kayla and Kyla Richardson signed National Letters of Intent (NLIs) to compete in track and field at USC it was announced by Director of Track & Field Caryl Smith Gilbert today (Nov. 26). The athletes combined to win numerous state high school titles and Norman was named the 2015 Gatorade National Boys Track & Field Athlete of the Year. Norman, from Vista Murrieta HS in Murrieta, Calif., led his team to the California state title by winning the 200m with a time of 20.30 (+0.7) and the 400m with a 2015 U.S. high school best time of 45.19, both which set the California state meet records. He bettered his 200m PR by running 20.24 to place second at the USATF Junior Championships, with the top two finishers breaking the previous Junior meet record time which had stood since 1983. Norman was named the 2015 Gatorade National Boys Track & Field Athlete of the Year for his track exploits and for his service off the track. Norman maintains a 3.41 GPA, works as a youth track instructor, volunteered for local food and shoe drives and donated his time to the Special Olympics. Brock, from Chaminade HS in Chatsworth, Calif., won the 2015 CIF 100m dash title at the state meet with a time of 10.34 (+1.8), which was tied for the fourth-fastest legal time by a high schooler last season. He also has run two 10.20 wind-aided 100m dashes. Brock took second to Norman in the 200m dash at the CIF state meet with a time of 21.16. He has a wind-legal 200m Cockrell, from Providence Day HS in Charlotte, N.C., was named the 2015 North Carolina Gatorade Girls Track & Field Athlete of the Year as she won the state 3A title in the 100m with a PR of 11.93, the 100m HH with a time of 13.53 and the 300m IH with a PR of 41.31, which was sixth in the country. She also won the 400m IH with the second-fastest high school time in the country of 56.67 at he USATF Junior Championships and took third in the 100m HH with a wind-aided time of 13.28 (+2.6w). She then won the 100m HH with a PR of 13.21 (-0.4) and the 200m with a PR of 23.71 at the NC Runners/SC Runners Elite Championships. Her time of 13.21 in the 100m HH was third among high schoolers, trailing only current USC freshman Jasmyne Graham and fellow Trojan recruit Mecca McGlaston. Corrin, from Harvard-Westlake HS in Studio City, Calif., won the 2015 CIF state long jump title with a leap of 20-10 (+0.6). She also won the state title as a freshman in 2013 and placed second as a sophomore in 2014. Corrin had a best legal jump of 20-11.00 (+2.0) which ranked third among U.S. high schooler last season, then won the long jump at the USATF Junior Championships with a wind-aided mark of 21-6.25/6.56m (+2.5w). Corrin went on to earn the silver medal with a jump of 20-1.50 (6.13m) at the Pan Am Junior Chapionships. She won nine of 10 meets she competed in last season, including jumping 20 feet or more in the last five and six times overall. She also owns a 300m IH best of 42.41 and finished seventh at the state meet with a time of 42.79. She has been named the L.A. Daily News Girls Athlete of the Year the last three seasons. Francis, from Rio Mesa HS in Oxnard, Calif., won the 2015 CIF state titles in the 100m with a time of 11.31 and the 200m with a PR of 23.09, which ranked third among high school women last season. She has a legal 100m time of 11.26, which ranked fourth among high schoolers, and had a wind-aided best of 11.24w. McGlaston, from Dublin HS in Dublin, Calif., had a PR and second-fastest 100m HH time by a high schooler of 13.18 (+1.4) to take second at the 2015 CIF state meet to Trojan freshman Jasmyne Graham. Her time of 13.18 was the World Junior leader., the third-fastest in state history and sixth-fastest ever by a high school hurdler. McGlaston won the 2014 CIF state title in the 100m HH with a time of 13.54. Kayla Richardson, of Walnut High in Walnut, Calif., has wind- aided PRs of 11.65 in the 100m and 23.45 in the 200m dashes. Richardson ran 11.74 to qualify for the 2015 CIF 100m finals with the fourth-fastest time and also had the third-fastest 200m qualifying time of 23.85, but did not run in the finals as she left to compete in the Southeast Asian Games for the Philippines. She finished as the runner-up in the 200m with a time of 23.67 at the Southeast Asian Games in Singapore. She was named the San Gabriel Valley Tribune Track and Field Athlete of the Year. She also won the 2015 CIF Southern Section 100m and 200m titles and posted a 400m PR of 56.53. As a sophomore, Richardson posted a long jump best of 20-2.25 (6.15m) to take second in the girls’ high school final at the 2014 Penn Relays. Kyla Richardson has been battling several injuries the past two seasons, but as a freshman ran 11.93 in the 100m. She did run a wind-aided 100m time of 11.83 last season at the Mt. SAC Relays in her first race back from injury.
GD3 8:30 a.m. CE Cagnei Duncan 10 Liberty-Bakersfield CC Mattei Peoples 12 Aptos LA Rosalva Mejia 12 Middle College NC Grace Taylor 11 Bishop O'Dowd NS Celeste Wilson 12 Chico SJ Sarah Anderson 12 Vista Del Lago SD McKenna Brown 10 La Costa Canyon SS Stefani Gaskell 12 Sultana
GD4 9:05 a.m. CE Gabby Satterlee 12 Central Valley Christian CC Cate Ratliff 12 Santa Cruz NC Morgin Coonfield 12 McKinleyville NS Anna Lewis 12 Central Valley SJ Cassi Land 10 Sonora SD Renee Phillips 11 Coronado SS Katie Scoville 10 La Canada
BD3 9:40 a.m. CE Anthony Moronez 12 Ridgeview CC Matthew Peterson 12 Saratoga LA Fernando Chavez 11 USC Cinematic Arts & Engineering Magnet NC David Frisbie 12 Kennedy-Fremont NS Jack Emanuel 11 Chico SJ Remington Breeze 12 Vista Del Lago SD Joshua Litwiller 12 La Costa Canyon SS Austin Tamagno 12 Brea Olinda
BD4 10:10 a.m. CE Jose Mosqueda 10 Kerman CC Roman Munoz 11 King City NC Jeremy Leary 11 Drake NS Chris Meeder 11 West Valley SJ Jackson McIlroy 11 Sonora SD Beau Prince 11 Sage Creek SS Andrew Burkhardt 12 JSerra
GD5 10:40 a.m. CE Gabriella Lugo 11 Bakersfield Christian CC Hana Marsheck 12 Woodside Priory LA NC Rylee Bowen 10 Sonoma Academy NS Karly Gutermuth 11 Trinity SJ Katarina Stashyn 12 Vacaville Christian SD Brooke Trossen 11 Francis Parker SS Mazzy Genovese 9 Rolling Hills Prep
BD1 11:15 a.m. CE Eduardo Herrera 12 Madera South CC Kent Slaney 11 Palo Alto LA Paul Luevano 12 Venice NC Tim Chrisman 12 Monte Vista OK Zachary Katzman 12 Skyline SJ Michael Vernau 11 Davis SD Charlie Pope 12 Torrey Pines SF Salem Bouhassoun 12 Mission SS Phillip Rocha 12 Arcadia
GD2 11:45 a.m. CE Devianna Salcedo 9 McFarland CC Gillian Meeks 12 Gunn LA Marcela Argueta 9 Canoga Park NC Megan McCandless 12 Granada SJ Kathryn Loken 11 Del Campo SD Nia Akins 12 Rancho Bernardo SS Amanda Gehrich 12 Tesoro
BD5 12:20 p.m. CE Luke Dykstra 12 Central Valley Christian CC Paul Colosi 12 St. Francis Central Coast Catholic LA NC Cooper Teare 11 St. Joseph/Notre Dame NS Chris Morzenti 12 Mt. Shasta SJ Brett Lombardi 11 Capital Christian SD Max Baez 12 Francis Parker SS Jack Van Scoter 12 Flintridge Prep
GD1 12:50 p.m. CE Lauren Moffett 12 Clovis North CC Lauren Jacob 12 Los Altos LA Patricia Sanchez 10 Santee Education Complex NC Brooke Starn 12 Monte Vista OK Johanna Ross 11 Oakland Tech SJ Sofia Castiglioni 11 Davis SD Paige Carter 11 San Marcos SF Kristen Leung 12 Lowell SS Chloe Arriaga 9 Walnut
BD2 CE Julian Irigoyen 12 Shafter CC Justin Robison 12 Lynbrook LA Veejay Jones 12 Verdugo Hills NC Andy Ehrenberg 12 Redwood SJ Daniel Ambriz 12 Merced SD Simeon Paul 11 Mt. Carmel SS Dylan Scarscone 12 Canyon/Anaheim
TURKEY DAY TRYPTOPHAN making you feel fat, chubby and outta shape? Shhooooot, that's why God created AAU National Cross Country Championships (which were traditionally the Saturday morning immediately after Thanksgiving somewhere fun like a golf course outside of Seattle or Burbank or LaCrosse, Wisconsin, Belmont Plateau in Philly or Crystal Springs in Belmont, CA) Instead perhaps you finished the cross country season and then waited till Sunday after Thanksgiving to run Dal...las White Rock, Fiesta Bowl, Philly or Mission Bay Marathon?
Alternatively, like the blokes pictured here you'd head to a regional 440 yards dirt/cinder/clay track for the first time since last spring where you'd gut out 2 miles in the Postal Run that'd be compared not just to Lompoc's Terry Williams down in SoCal but to all up and coming cross country cats across America. Regardless of our place in the sport, Thanksgiving was always the very briefest respite.. by 8PM on the aforementioned Thursday you believed you were ridiculously fat and outta shape...48 to 72 hours later you'd be just crushing a 26.2 mile marathon or AAU Cross Nationals or at least the local yokal postal competition. We're typically convinced that we are only as good. as our most recent workout or race and find no solace in that one Pilgrim inspired holiday ...and so are entirely compelled to head out ASAP and perform some high intensity bashing to help us justify the stuffing, the cranberry sauce and the second slice of humble pumpkin pie I call this "phenomenon", you know, when your athletic brain wants to play tricks on you, being 'runner crazy'...as in I saw that dude just the day after Thanksgiving he was all like 'runner crazy' ...pissed and depressed and stuff and then he texted me Saturday night to say he just inexplicably made the junior national XC team heading to Morroco and so now was just about over the friggin' moon wink emoticon Happens EVERY single year at this time to long distance racing athletes especially those who regularly average 85 MPW or more. Check it out... either YOU or two to three of your running buds will experience this remarkable rebound effect from the deepest darkest Thanksgiving hangover between early a.m. on this Thanksgiving Saturday morn and 1:45 p.m. this coming Sunday afternoon ...mark my words wink emoticon
The IAAF has sent a detailed response to the allegations that it has "idly sat by" and tolerated rampant blood doping in Athletics, ahead of next week’s appearance by the IAAF before the UK Parliament’s Culture Media and Sport Select Committee’s inquiry into ‘Blood Doping in Athletics’.
The document, which is now published on the IAAF website here, demonstrates that:
- The IAAF has consistently been a pioneer in the war against blood doping in sport, using every tool available to it to catch blood dopers in athletics and with considerable success.
The Athlete Biological Passport (ABP) began in 2009. The IAAF in consultation with WADA was the first sports organisation to adopt the ABP across the whole sport.
- Prior to 2009, the IAAF screened nearly 8000 blood samples for potential markers of blood doping, and followed up with thousands of urine tests to detect the presence of rEPO.
That strategy, which continues to this day, has led to 145 athletes being caught with rEPO in their systems (including Rashid Ramzi, one of the athletes highlighted by The Sunday Times), and another eight athletes (including the four Russian athletes highlighted by The Sunday Times) being caught and banned for manipulating the tests in an attempt to evade detection.
The IAAF has created ABP profiles for more than 5500 athletes, based on more than 13,000 ABP samples collected from those athletes. As a result, 56 more athletes have been caught and sanctioned for blood doping with 13 further cases pending, and 12 more currently in the pipeline. This is significantly more ABP cases than every other anti-doping organisation in the world put together.
- ARD/The Sunday Times and their consultants cannot deny any of this. Instead, they argue that the abnormal values found in the blood screening tests conducted by the IAAF from 2001-2009 (i.e., pre-ABP) were not just indicators of potential doping that could be used to target expensive urine tests for rEPO, but instead constituted "compelling evidence" of blood doping so stating the IAAF should have charged the athletes based on that evidence alone, without the need for any further testing.
- The IAAF fundamentally disagrees with that assertion, and it is not alone. WADA and Dick Pound, the chair of its Independent Commission, have also stated clearly and unequivocally that "no test data derived from the IAAF database prior to the adoption of the ABP in 2009 can be considered to be proof of doping. It would be reckless, if not libellous, to make such an allegation. The reported values may be suspicious and lead to targeted testing of the athletes involved, but nothing more could be done with the information".
- In the response published today, the IAAF sets out in detail why that is correct, and why the contrary stance of ARD/The Sunday Times and their retained consultants lacks any scientific or legal basis.
The results of testing of an athlete's blood samples are only reliable, and may only be fairly compared with the results from other samples in that athlete's profile. If all of the samples are collected in strict compliance with stringent and standardised sample collection, transport and analysis procedures.
If not, any apparent differences in results from one sample to the next have no scientific validity. Those standardised procedures were only introduced in 2009, with WADA's adoption of the ABP programme.
The samples collected by the IAAF before that date were not collected pursuant to those procedures. Therefore, while they could be used to help focus expensive urine testing for rEPO on potentially suspicious athletes, they certainly could not be used as evidence of doping in and of themselves.
- Furthermore, even if the pre-2009 values had been reliable and fairly comparable with each other, deviations in those values could be caused not by blood doping but rather by innocent factors (such as altitude, exercise, medical conditions, etc.). Therefore, an abnormal value is not evidence of doping,which is a classic 'prosecutor's fallacy.
Instead, information has to be gathered so experts can assess and seek explanations for the abnormal readings an athlete's profile. Only if they conclude that the abnormal reading is highly likely to be due to blood doping, and that no other potential explanation is plausible, can blood doping charges be brought.
But these potentially confounding factors were only fully identified when the ABP programme was adopted by WADA in 2009. Prior to that time the necessary information was not collected by anyone to enable these other factors to be assessed.
As a result, no charge could ever be brought based on the pre-2009 data, for fear of mistaking an abnormal reading for blood doping when it could have been entirely innocent.
- Paula Radcliffe's case illustrates the point perfectly. She has been publicly accused of blood doping based on the gross misinterpretation of raw and incomplete data. When all of the necessary information is considered, however (as the WADA ABP protocols require), there are clearly plausible explanations for the values in her profile that are entirely innocent.
For example, in two of the cases highlighted by The Sunday Times, the samples were collected immediately after competition (when dehydration causes a decrease in plasma concentration, and so an increase in reported haemoglobin concentration, even though there has been no increase in red blood cells).
Any competent scientist would therefore immediately conclude that they should be disregarded. Furthermore, the IAAF followed up by testing Ms Radcliffe's urine samples for rEPO, and her blood samples for evidence of blood transfusions, and all of those tests came back negative.
The IAAF is not complacent about doping in its sport. It will continue to use every tool at its disposal to fight doping and protect clean athletes, and hopes that investigative journalists will continue to assist it by unearthing evidence of cheating for it to follow up.
The IAAF also acknowledges the important role of the media in holding it and other anti-doping organisations to account in their efforts to fight doping.
The IAAF cannot sit idly by while public confidence in its willingness to protect the integrity of its sport is undermined by allegations of inaction/incompetence that are based on bad scientific and legal argument. Instead it has both a right and an obligation to set the record straight.
---
The IAAF will respond separately to the allegations in the report issued by the Independent Commission on 9 November 2015, that high-ranking officials at or associated with the IAAF corruptly delayed the prosecution of up to eight ABP cases in 2012, thereby allowing certain athletes to compete at the London Olympics who should instead have been provisionally suspended from the sport.
Blood doping is the practice of boosting the number of red blood cells in the bloodstream in order to enhance athletic performance. Because such blood cells carry oxygen from the lungs to the muscles, a higher concentration in the blood can improve an athlete’s aerobic capacity (VO2 max) and endurance.[1] Many methods of blood doping are illegal, particularly in professional sports.
Blood doping is defined as the use of illicit products (i.e. erythropoietin (EPO), darbepoetin-alfa, hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF) stabilizers) and methods (i.e. increase aerobic capacity by maximizing the uptake of O2) in order to enhance the O2 transport of the body to the muscles.[2] The body undergoes aerobic respiration in order to provide sufficient delivery of O2 to the exercising skeletal muscles and the main determining factors are shown in figure 1. The rate maximum O2 uptake (O2max) depends on cardiac output, O2 extraction and hemoglobin mass. The cardiac output of an athlete is difficult to manipulate during competitions and the distribution of cardiac output is at the maximum rate (i.e. 80%) during competitions. In addition, the O2 extraction is approximately 90% at maximal exercise. Therefore, the only method to enhance the physical performance left is to increase the O2 content in the artery by enhancing the hemoglobin mass. In other words, hemoglobin concentration and blood volume contribute to hemoglobin mass.[2]
Many forms of blood doping stem from the misuse of pharmaceuticals. These drug treatments have been created for clinical use to increase the oxygen delivery when the human body is not able to do so naturally.
Erythropoietin is a glycoprotein hormone produced by the interstitial fibroblasts that signal for erythropoiesis in bone marrow.(Britannica) The increased activity of a Hemocytoblast (RBC stem cell) allows the blood to have a greater carrying capacity for oxygen. EPO was first developed to counteract the effects of chemotherapy and radiation therapy for cancer patients.[3] EPO also stimulates increased wound healing.[4] The physiological side effect of EPO, particularly increased hematocrit, has become a potential drug to abuse by professional and amateur cyclists.
Hypoxia-inducible factor stabilizer (HIF stabilizer) is a pharmaceutical used to treat chronic kidney disease. Like most transcription factors, the HIF transcription factor is responsible for the expression of a protein. The HIF stabilizer activates the activity of EPO due to anemia induced hypoxia, metabolic stress, and vasculogenesis—the creation of new blood vessels.[5] HIF stabilizers as used by cyclists in combination with cobalt chloride/desferrioxamine stimulate and de-regulate the natural production of erythropoietin hormone.[6] At physiologically low PaO2 around 40 mmHg, EPO is released from the kidneys to increase hemoglobin transportation.[7] The combination of drugs consistently releases EPO due to increased transcription at the cellular level. The effect wears off when the HIF stabilizers, cobalt chloride/desferrioxamine is excreted and/or decayed by the body.
Blood transfusions can be traditionally classified as autologous, where the blood donor and transfusion recipient are the same, or as allogeneic/homologous, where the blood is transfused into someone other than the donor. Blood transfusion begins by the withdrawal of 1 to 4 units of blood (1 unit = 450 ml of blood) several weeks before competition. The blood is centrifuged, the plasma components are immediately reinfused, and the corpuscular elements, principally red blood cells (RBCs), are stored refrigerated at 4◦C or frozen at −80◦C.[8] As blood stored by refrigeration displays a steady decline in the number of RBCs, a substantial percentage, up to 40%, of the stored RBCs may not be viable.[9] The freezing process, conversely, limits the aging of the cells, allowing the storage of the blood for up to 10 years with a 10% to 15% loss of RBCs.[10] Stored RBCs are then reinfused, usually 1 to 7 days before a high-endurance event. As a significant amount of iron is removed by each autologous transfusion, an adequate time for recovery of not less than 3 days from the last donation, and appropriate iron supplements, are usually required for patients undergoing autologous donations. Nearly 50% of autologous donations are not used by the donor and are discarded, as current standards do not allow transfusion of these units to another patient for safety reasons.
Biochemical and biotechnological development has allowed novel approaches to this issue, in the form of engineered O2 carriers, widely known as “blood substitutes.” The blood substitutes currently available are chiefly polymerized haemoglobin solutions or haemoglobin-based oxygen carriers (HBOCs) and perfluorocarbons (PFCs).[11][12]
HBOCs are intra/ inter-molecularly engineered human or animal hemoglobins, only optimized for oxygen delivery and longer intravascular circulation. The presence of 2,3-diphosphoglycerate within erythrocytes maintains the normal affinity of hemoglobin for oxygen. HBOCs do not contain erythrocytes and lose this interaction, thus, unmodified human HBOC solutions have a very high oxygen affinity which compromises their function. Chemical methods developed to overcome this problem have resulted in carriers that effectively release oxygen at the physiological pO2 of peripheral tissues.[13] A common feature of all HBOCs is their resistance to dissociate when dissolved in media, which contrasts hemoglobin of natural dissociation under non-physiological conditions. HBOCs may hypothetically supply greater benefits to athletes than those provided by the equivalent hemoglobin in traditional RBC infusion. Recent developments have shown that HBOCs are not only simple RBC substitutes, but highly effective O2 donors in terms of tissue oxygenation. Additional effects include increases in blood serum iron, ferritin, and Epo;[14] up to 20% increased diffusion of oxygen and improved exercise capacity;[15] increased CO2 production; and lower lactic acid generation in anaerobic activity.[16]
PFCs, also known as fluorocarbons, are inert, water-insoluble, synthetic compounds, consisting primarily of carbon and fluorine atoms bonded together in strong C-F bonds. PFCs are substantially clear and colorless liquid emulsions that are heterogeneous in molecular weight, surface area, electronic charge, and viscosity; their high content of electron-dense fluorine atoms results in little intramolecular interaction and low surface tension, making such substances excellent solvents for gases, especially oxygen and carbon dioxide.[11] Some of these molecules can dissolve 100 times more oxygen than plasma. PFCs are naturally hydrophobic and need to be emulsified to be injected intravenously. Since PFCs dissolve rather than bind oxygen, their capacity to serve as a blood substitute is determined principally by the pO2 gradients in the lung and at the target tissue. Therefore, their oxygen transport properties differ substantially from those of whole blood and, especially, from those of RBCs. [17] At a conventional ambient pO2 of 135 mm Hg, the oxygen content of 900 ml/l perfluorocarbon is less than 50 ml/l, whereas an optimal oxygen content of 160 ml/l, which is still lower than that of whole blood in normal conditions, can be achieved only by a pO2 greater than 500 mm Hg. In practice, at a conventional alveolar pO2 of 135 mm Hg, PFCs will not be able to provide sufficient oxygenation to peripheral tissues.[17][18] Due to their small size, PFCs are able to permeate circulation where erythrocytes may not flow. In tiny capillaries, PFCs produce the greatest benefit, as they increase local oxygen delivery much more efficiently than would be expected from the increase in oxygen content in larger arteries.[19] In addition, as gases are in the dissolved state within PFCs, it pO2 promotes efficient oxygen delivery to peripheral tissues. Since the mid-1980s, improvements in both oxygen capacity and emulsion properties of PFCs have led to the development of second-generation PFCbased oxygen carriers; two PFC products are currently being tested in phase III clinical trials.[20]
Transition metal complexes are widely known to play important roles in erythropoiesis, as such, inorganic supplementation is proving to be an emerging technique in blood doping. Particularly of note is the cobalt complex, cobalamin (Vitamin B12) commonly used as a dietary supplement. Cobalamin is an important complex used in the manufacture of red blood cells and thus was of interest for potential use in blood doping. Experimental evidence, however, has shown that cobalamin has no effect on erythropoiesis in the absence of a red blood cell/oxygen deficiency.[21] These results seem to confirm much of what is already known about the functioning of cobalamin.[21] The signaling pathway that induces erythropoietin secretion and subsequently red blood cell manufacture using cobalamin is O2 dependent. Erythropoietin is only secreted in the kidneys when there is an O2 deficiency, as such, RBC manufacture is independent of the amount of cobalamin administered when there is no O2 deficiency. Accordingly, cobalamin is of little to no value in blood doping. More potent for use in blood doping is Co2+ (administered as Cobalt(II) chloride, CoCl2). Cobalt chloride has been known to be useful in treating anemic patients.[22][23] Recent experimental evidence has proved the efficacy of cobalt chloride in blood doping.[22] Studies into the action of this species have shown that Co2+ induces hypoxia like responses, the most relevant response being erythropoiesis. Co2+ induces this response by binding to the N-terminus (loop helix loop domain) of the Hypoxia inducing transcription factors HIF-1α and HIF-2α, and thus stabilizes these protein complexes.[23][24] Under normal O2 conditions, HIFs are destabilized as proline and asparagine residues are hydroxylated by HIF-α hydroxylases, these unstable HIFs are subsequently degraded following a ubiquitin-proteosome pathway, as such, they cannot then bind and activate transcription of genes encoding Erythropoietin (EPO).[23][24] With Co2+ stabilization, degradation is prevented and genes encoding EPO can then be activated. The mechanism for this Co2+ N terminus stabilization is not yet fully understood. In addition to N-terminus binding, it has also been hypothesized that replacement of Fe2+ by Co2+ in the hydroxylase active site could be a contributing factor to the stabilizing action of Co2+.[23] It is understood however, is that Co2+ binding permits Ubiquitin binding but prevents proteosomal degradation.[24]
In 2004, a test for detection allogeneic/homologous blood transfusion doping was implemented. Flow Cytometry is the method of choice. By examining markers on the surface of blood cells, the method can determine whether blood from more than one person is present in an athlete’s circulation. The test utilizes 12 antisera directed against the blood group antigens, obtained from donor plasma. The antigens are labeled with secondary antibodies, which are conjugated with phycoerythrin to label IgG or IgM-coated RBCs and enhance the detection by flow cytometry [2][25] The flow cytometry is able to detect minor variance in blood group antigens. The assessment was able to distinguish the blood of subjects who had earlier received at least one unit of allogeneic blood.[25] This technique is able to detect small (<5%) populations of cells that are antigenically distinct from an individual’s own RBCs.[25]
Autologous blood doping detection is done indirectly via CO rebreathing technique to measure the nonphysiologic increases in Hb mass. The principle of CO rebreathing method used currently requires an O2-CO gas mixture inhalation for about 10-15mins.[26] By measuring the difference in carboxyhemoglobin concentration (HbCO) before and after rebreathing, the volume of CO and the binding capacity of Hb for CO ( 1.39ml g-1), total Hb mass can be calculated.[26] This detection method is problematic for an athlete as it is not desirable to breathe in CO shortly before a competition, which may potentially affect their performances.
Detection of Blood Hemoglobin-based Oxygen Carrier[edit]
Detection method for Hemoglobin-based oxygen carriers (i.e. Oxyglobulin® ) is done in four separate steps. Step one involves the elimination of abundance proteins in the blood samples by immunodepletion (i.e. Proteo Prep ® 20 plasma immunodepletion kit).[27] This process ensures that other proteins (i.e. albumin and immunoglobulin) do not interfere with capillary electrophoresis (CE) separation by changing the ionization. Second step, CE separation is done under certain condition, in this case background electrolyte consisting of ammonium formate (75mM at pH 9.5) in order to provide sufficient resolution between HBOC and Hb.[27] Third step, UV/Vis detection was performed at 415 nm to selectively detect HBOC and HB. Fourth step, Time-of-flight (TOF) or Mass spectrometer(MS) allowed increase accuracy in selectivity between hemoproteins and other proteins and definite determination of HBOC uptake.[28] The detection limits for CE-UV/Vis at 415 nm and CE-ESI-TOF/MS results to be 0.20 and 0.45g/dL for plasma respectively.[27]
Detection of Cobalt Concentration by Utilizing the Biokinetic Model[edit]
Co can be detected by laboratory blood analysis if the intake amount is greater than 400 μg per day. As the whole blood concentration is greater than 1μg/L and the urinary concentration is greater than 10μg/L after at least 10 days of administration. The dose, which increases the red blood cell production to approximately 16%-21%, is about 68 mg Co per day for at least 10 days of oral administration. The predicted whole blood concentration of Co exceeds 200μg/L 2 hr after the last intake and the average urine concentrations of Co exceed 3000 μg/L within 24 hr of intake. A study was carried out where 23 subjects were to take 900 μg per day in the form of CoCl2 for 10 days. The model predictions were then compared to the study. The result shows that the model prediction for blood and urine are between the median concentration of the male and female groups, which indicate the model predictions sufficiently represent the test population as a whole.[29]
In 1993, U.S. Special Forces commanders at Fort Bragg started experimenting with blood doping, also known as blood loading. Special Forces operators would provide two units of whole blood, from which red blood cells would be extracted, concentrated, and stored under cold temperatures. 24 hours before a mission or battle, a small amount of red blood cells would be infused back into the soldier. Military scientists believe that the procedure increases the soldiers’s endurance and alertness because of the increase in the blood's capability to carry oxygen. In 1998, the Australian Defence Forces approved this technique for the Special Air Service Regiment. Senior nutritionist at the Australian Defence Science and Technology Organization Chris Forbes-Ewan is quoted as saying that, unlike in sport, "all's fair in love and war.""What we are trying to gain is an advantage over any potential adversary," Forbes-Ewan said.[30] In this study, over 50 performance-enhancing drugs and techniques were rejected. The six that were approved are caffeine, ephedrine, energy drinks, modafinil, creatine, and blood-loading.[31]
Blood doping probably started in the 1950s[citation needed] but was not outlawed until 1986. While it was still legal, it was commonly used by middle and long-distance runners. The first known case of blood doping occurred at the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow as Kaarlo Maaninka was transfused with two pints of blood before winning medals in the 5 and 10 kilometer track races, though this was not against the rules at the time.[32] Cyclist Joop Zoetemelk admitted to receiving blood transfusions during the 1976 Tour de France, where he finished second, although he claimed that these were intended to treat his anaemia rather than enhance his performance.[33] The American cyclist Pat McDonough admitted to blood doping at the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles.[34] Following the 1984 Summer games it was revealed that one-third of the U.S. cycling team had received blood transfusions before the games, where they won nine medals, their first medal success since the 1912 Summer Olympics.[34] In the same year cyclist Francesco Moser used blood transfusions to prepare for his successful attempt to break the hour record.[33]"Blood doping" was banned by the IOC in 1985, though no test existed for it at the time.[34] The Swedish cyclist Niklas Axelsson tested positive for EPO in 2000. The American cyclist Tyler Hamilton failed a fluorescent-activated cell sorting test for detecting homologous blood transfusions during the 2004 Olympics. He was allowed to keep his gold medal because the processing of his sample precluded conducting a second, confirmatory test. He appealed a second positive test for homologous transfusion from the 2004 Vuelta a España to the International Court of Arbitration for Sport but his appeal was denied. Hamilton's lawyers proposed Hamilton may be a genetic chimera or have had a 'vanishing twin' to explain the presence of red blood cells from more than one person. While theoretically possible, these explanations were ruled to be of "negligible probability".[35] The Operación Puerto case in 2006 involved allegations of doping and blood doping of hundreds of athletes in Spain. Tour de France rider Alexander Vinokourov, of the Astana Team, tested positive for two different blood cell populations and thus for homologous transfusion, according to various news reports on July 24, 2007. Vinokourov was tested after his victory in the 13th stage time trial of the Tour on July 21, 2007. A doping test is not considered to be positive until a second sample is tested to confirm the first. Vinokourov's B sample has now tested positive, and he faces a possible suspension of 2 years and a fine equal to one year's salary.[36] He also tested positive after stage 15.[37][38] Vinokourov's teammate Andrej Kashechkin also tested positive for homologous blood doping[39] on August 1, 2007, just a few days after the conclusion of the 2007 Tour de France (a race that had been dominated by doping scandals). His team withdrew after the revelation that Vinokourov had doped. According to Russian investigators, 19-year-old New York Rangers prospect and Russian hockey player Alexei Cherepanov was engaged in blood doping for several months before he died on October 13, 2008, after collapsing on the bench during a game in Russia. He also had myocarditis.[40] The German speed skater and five-fold Olympic gold medalist Claudia Pechstein was banned for two years in 2009 for alleged blood doping, based on irregular levels of reticulocytes in her blood and the assumption that these levels were always highest during competitions. Her mean reticulocyte count over the ten years from 2000 to 2009 was 2.1% during top events like Olympic Games and during world championships. At world cup races the mean reticulocyte was 1.9% and during training phases 2.0%.[41] The Court of Arbitration for Sport confirmed the ban in November 2009 in stating: "...once the possibility of a blood disease has been safely excluded...".[42] In September 2010, the Swiss Federal Supreme Court rejected the athlete's appeal, stating that Ms. Pechstein's inherited blood anomaly had been known before ("die vererbte Blutanomalie bekannt gewesen sei").[43] On May 20, 2011 Tyler Hamilton turned in his 2004 Olympic Gold Medal to the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency [44] after admitting to doping in a 60 Minutes interview. On August 23, 2012 Lance Armstrong was stripped of his seven Tour de France titles and banned for life by cycling's governing body following a report from the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency that accused him of leading a doping program during his cycling career. He later admitted to using banned substances including blood doping with transfusions and EPO in an interview with Oprah Winfrey on January 17, 2013.[45]
The simple act of increasing the number of red blood cells in blood may be associated with hyperviscosity syndrome which is characterized by increased blood viscosity and decreased cardiac output and blood flow velocity which results in the reduction of peripheral oxygen delivery.[46] This increases the chances of heart attack, stroke, phlebitis, and pulmonary embolism, which has been seen in cases where there is too much blood reintroduced into the blood stream. Because blood doping increases the volume of red blood cells, it effectively introduces a condition called polycythemia, a blood disorder that has known adverse outcomes such as heart attacks or strokes. Blood contamination during preparation or storage is another issue. Contamination was seen in 1 in every 500,000 transfusions of red blood cells in 2002.[47] Blood contamination can lead to septicemia or an infection that affects the whole body. Certain medications used to increase red blood cells can reduce liver function and lead to liver failure, pituitary problems, and increases in cholesterol levels.[48]
^ Jump up to: abcJelkmann, Wolfgang, and Carsten Lundby. "Blood Doping and its Detection." Blood Journal 118.9 (2013): 2395-2402.
Jump up ^Buemi, M; Caccamo, C; Nostro, L; Cavallaro, E; Floccari, F; Grasso, G (Mar 2005). "Brain and cancer: the protective role of erythropoietin.". Medicinal Research Reviews25 (2): 245–59. doi:10.1002/med.20012. PMID15389732.
Jump up ^Liu, S; Ren, J; Hong, Z; Yan, D; Gu, G; Han, G; Wang, G; Ren, H; Chen, J; Li, J (Feb 2013). "Efficacy of erythropoietin combined with enteral nutrition for the treatment of anemia in Crohn's disease: a prospective cohort study.". Nutrition in clinical practice : official publication of the American Society for Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition28 (1): 120–7. doi:10.1177/0884533612462744. PMID23064018.
Jump up ^al.], Ronald Hoffman ... [et (2009). Hematology : basic principles and practice (5th ed.). Philadelphia, PA: Churchill Livingstone/Elsevier. pp. Ch68. ISBN0443067155.
Jump up ^McArdle WD, Katch FI, Katch VL. Exercise Physiology. In McArdle WD, Katch FI, Katch VL, Eds. Energy, Nutrition, and Human Performance. 2nd Ed. Pp 409–411. Philadelphia: Lea and Febiger, 1986.
Jump up ^Gledhill N. Blood doping and related issues: A brief review. Med Sci Sports Exerc 1982; 14: 183– 189.
Jump up ^Ghaphery NA. Performance-enhancing drugs. Orthop Clin North Am 1995; 26: 433–442.
^ Jump up to: abScott MG, Kucik DF, Goodnough LT, Monk TG. Blood substitutes: Evolution and future applications. Clin Chem 1997; 43: 1724–1731
Jump up ^Ma Z, Monk TG, Goodnough LT, McClellan A, Gawryl M, Clark T, Moreira P, Keipert PE, Scott MG. Effect of hemoglobin- and Perflubron-based oxygen carriers on common clinical laboratory tests. Clin Chem 1997; 43: 1732–1737
Jump up ^Lieberthal W, Fuhro R, Freedman JE, Toolan G, Loscalzo J, Valeri CR. O-raffinose cross-linking markedly reduces systemic and renal vasoconstrictor effects of unmodified human hemoglobin. J Pharmacol Exp Ther 1999; 288: 1278–1287.
Jump up ^184Hughes GS Jr, Francome SF, Antal EJ, Adams WJ, Locker PK, Yancey EP, Jacobs EE Jr. Hematologic effects of a novel hemoglobin-based oxygen carrier in normal male and female subjects. J Lab Clin Med 1995; 126: 444–451.
Jump up ^Hughes GS Jr, Antal EJ, Locker PK, Francom SF, Adams WJ, Jacobs EE Jr. Physiology and pharmacokinetics of a novel hemoglobin-based oxygen carrier in humans. Crit Care Med 1996; 24: 756– 764.
Jump up ^Hughes GS Jr, Yancey EP, Albrecht R, Locker PK, Francom SF, Orringer EP, Antal EJ, Jacobs EE Jr. Hemoglobin-based oxygen carrier preserves submaximal exercise capacity in humans. Clin Pharmacol Ther 1995; 58: 434–443.
^ Jump up to: abSpahn DR. Blood substitutes. Artificial oxygen carriers: Perfluorocarbon emulsions. Crit Care 1999; 3: R93–R97.
Jump up ^Riess JG. Understanding the fundamentals of perfluorocarbons and perfluorocarbon emulsions relevant to in vivo oxygen delivery. Artif Cells Blood Substit Immobil Biotechnol 2005; 33: 47– 63.
Jump up ^Patel S, Mehra A. Modeling of oxygen transport in blood-perfluorocarbon emulsion mixtures: Part II: Tissue oxygenation. ASAIO J 1998; 44: 157–165.
Jump up ^Hill SE. Oxygen therapeutics. Current concepts. Can J Anaesth 2001; 48 (4 Suppl): S32–S40
^ Jump up to: abJelkmann W. The disparate roles of cobalt in erythropoiesis, and doping relevance. Open Journal of Hematology 2012, 3-6
^ Jump up to: abLippi, G., Franchini, M., Guidi G. Cobalt chloride administration in athletes: a new perspective in blood doping? Br J Sports Med 39 2005, 11, 872–873.
^ Jump up to: abcdJelkmann, W. Novel Erythropoietic Agents: A Threat to Sportsmanship. Medician Sportiva 2007, 11 (2), 32-34.
^ Jump up to: abcKanayaa, K., Kamitania, T. pVHL-independent ubiquitination of HIF1a and its stabilization by cobalt ion. Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications 2003, 306, 750–755.
^ Jump up to: abcNelson, M., et al. "Proof of Homologous Blood Transfusion through Quantification of Blood Group Antigens." Haematologica 88 (2003): 12841295.
^ Jump up to: abSchmidt, Walter, and Nicole Prommer. "The Optimised CO-Rebreathing Method: A New Tool to Determine Total Haemogloblin Mass Routinely." Eur J Appl Physiol 95.486-495 (2005).
^ Jump up to: abcA.Staub, S., et al. "Analysis of Hemoglobin-Based Oxygen Carriers by CE-UV'Vis and CE-ESI-TOF/MS." Electropheresis 31 (2010): 1241-1247.
Jump up ^A.Staub, S., et al. "Blood Doping Detection- A New Analytical Approach with Capillary Electrophoresis." CHIMIA 64.12 (2010): 886.
Jump up ^Legett, R. W. "The Biokenetic of Inorganic Cobalt in the Human Body." Science of the total environment (2008): 259-269.
Jump up ^"Bundesgericht weist Revisionsgesuch der Eisschnellläuferin Claudia Pechstein ab", Medienmitteilung des Bundesgerichts, 1 October 2010. (German)
Jump up ^Karlinsky, Neal. "Lance Armstrong Stripped of 7 Tour De France Titles, Banned for Life After Doping Scandal."ABC News. ABC News Network, 22 Oct. 2012. Web. 06 Oct. 2015. <http://abcnews.go.com/US/lance-armstrong-stripped-tour-de-france-titles-banned/story?id=17535635>.
Jump up ^Smith DA, Perry PJ. The efficacy of ergogenic agents in athletic competition. Part II: Other performance-enhancing agents. Ann Pharmacother. 1992;26:653-659.
Jump up ^Blajchman M. "Incidence and significance of the bacterial contamination of blood components." Dev Biol (Basel) 108: 59-67.
Jump up ^Urhausen,Axel, Albers Torsten and Kindermann Wilfried. Reversibility of the effects on blood cells, lipids, liver function and hormones in former anabolic–androgenic steroid abuser. The Journal of Steroid Biochemistry and Molecular Biology. Volume 84, Issues 2-3, February 2003, Pages 369-375
Carolee Britton Gregg is the wife of the Davis High School coach Bill Gregg. Needless to say it was very cold! I introduced the Section champions before each race. I started announcing this meet in 1999 after the death of Bob Womack. Peter Jensen announced the teams and Tim O'Rourke called the races.