You are working on Staging2

Sun Yang’s Public CAS Hearing Date Set As Swimmer Comments On Dwyer

In August we reported how the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) hearing in Chinese Olympic gold medalist Sun Yang‘s ongoing anti-doping case had been postponed. Now, the swimming superstar’s lawyer has revealed that the new date for the hearing.

The public hearing, which was originally scheduled for September of this year, was delayed “due to unexpected personal circumstance, one of the parties was obliged to request a postponement of the hearing.” However, the new date is now set for November 15th in Montreux, Switzerland. (Sina)

Sun was cleared by a FINA Anti-Doping Panel after an incident in late 2018 where one of his bodyguards ordered that a vial of his blood be smashed after collection by an anti-doping agent. Sun and his camp have expressed concerns about the qualifications of the anti-doping collection group, and claim that one of the agents was simply a classmate of the doping control officer and was taking secret pictures of Sun on his cellphone during the incident.

You can read more background on Sun Yang‘s CAS hearing here.

The hearing date’s announcement is coming a day after Sun Yang offered up a comment on the news that American Olympic medalist Conor Dwyer had been banned for 20 months due to having tested positive for an anabolic agent in 3 different out-of-competition tests in late 2018.

In a translation of Sun Yang‘s Weibo post, the swimmer stated regarding Dwyer, “Athletes must hold themselves responsible for food and drugs they take, not to defeat their own hard work and sacrifices.”

Among Dwyer’s Olympic medals was a bronze in the 200m free at the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio, a race in which Sun Yang took gold.

In This Story

35
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

35 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Karl W Hallesy
5 years ago

Until a positive test I give all swimmers credit! After a positive test I never recognize the person or their accomplishments in any way ever again!

john
5 years ago

Whether the rules of the drug is a rules, and whether the drug can improve the results, coaches and doctors are very early understanding.

FSt
5 years ago

Why can’t that cretin just go away? Or just shut up at least! Take a cue from Yefimova.

Corn Pop
5 years ago

How come the Americans get to have their own appeals tribunal & don’t have to go to Switzerland? Does WADA ever say ‘ no feckin way jose’ & take it to CAS?

Is it like The ICC where the US wants ppl it doesn’t like to be prosecuted but when the US cases are on the radar , they actually threaten the judges . Then cases are politely dropped .& its back to the usual suspects .

Anyhow not for long . I see US rep & veteran Brian Mast congratulated the uS Navy on its birthday & posted a pic of a Russian ship ..

Corn Pop
Reply to  Corn Pop
5 years ago

Better still it has the Russian navy ensign flying & it’s the Peter The Great , the nuclear missiled flagship of the Northern Fleet !

My day is fulfilled . Thank you guys .

Troyy
Reply to  Corn Pop
5 years ago

Every country has their own local appeals tribunal but things can also escalate to the CAS like this American case:

https://www.insidethegames.biz/articles/1060661/cas-reject-wada-appeal-against-roberts-doping-violation-following-passionate-kissing-defence

and this one:

https://www.lawinsport.com/item/cas-dismiss-wada-appeal-re-jessica-hardy

and this Australian one:

https://www.sportsintegrityinitiative.com/fina-cas-appeal-by-wada-led-us-to-sanction-kylie-palmer/

There are probably many others but these were the first few I found in Google.

Snarky
5 years ago

Dwyer and Sun. Roid relay

The perfect high elbow
5 years ago

Will there be a way to watch the public hearing live?

hookem91
5 years ago

Pot, meet kettle.

Fatty
5 years ago

Sun Yang: “looking forward to prove my innocence in front of the world, to take out all disturbance so I could concentrate in the swimming career that I love.“

About Braden Keith

Braden Keith

Braden Keith is the Editor-in-Chief and a co-founder/co-owner of SwimSwam.com. He first got his feet wet by building The Swimmers' Circle beginning in January 2010, and now comes to SwimSwam to use that experience and help build a new leader in the sport of swimming. Aside from his life on the InterWet, …

Read More »