Italian Olympic Committee (CONI)
President Giovanni Malagò on Thursday defended 26 Italian
athletes cited by an anti-doping body, saying ban requests
against them were "just a formality".
The two-year ban requests for 26 athletes "have caused a lot
of confusion," Malago said.
"The anti-doping organisation's citations were a formality
and only for 2009-2012...these lads did not cheat".
Malagò said the case concerned faulty "communications of
presence", and did not mean the athletes were actively eluding
drug tests.
He said the Italian athletics federation "is not only in
the clear but in certain respects it is a victim".
"This is not a doping case," he added. "A doping case is
the one in Russia, what we have here (in Italy) is an issue of
procedures that were not formally respected".
What it boils down to, he said, is the 26 athletes failed
to fill out the paperwork correctly.
The National Anti-Doping Organisation NADO on Wednesday
asked that the 26 Italian athletics competitors be banned for
two years for dodging tests.
The athletes named included sprinter Simone Collio,
middle-distance runner Andrea Lalli, triple jumper Fabrizio
Donato, retired former pole-vault world champ Giuseppe
Gibilisco, triple jumper Daniele Greco and long jumper Andrew
Howe.
The requests came after NADO assessed a probe by
Carabinieri in the northern Italian towns of Trento and Bolzano.
The full list of the athletes involved is: Roberto BERTOLINI;
Migidio BOURIFA; Filippo CAMPIOLI; Simone COLLIO; Roberto
DONATI; Fabrizio DONATO; Giovanni FALOCI; Matteo GALVAN;
Giuseppe GIBILISCO; Daniele GRECO; Andrew HOWE; Anna INCERTI;
Andrea LALLI; Stefano LA ROSA; Claudio LICCIARDELLO; Daniele
MEUCCI; Christian OBRIST; Ruggero PERTILE; Jacques RIPARELLI;
Silvia SALIS; Fabrizio SCHEMBRI; Daniele SECCI; Kaddour SLIMANI;
Gianluca TAMBERI; Marco Francesco VISTALLI; Silvia WEISSTEINER.
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED © Copyright ANSA