Christian Coleman stormed to victory in the 100 metres at
the World Championships in Doha on Saturday, emphatically shrugging off
the missed drug test controversy which had threatened to derail his
career.
The 23-year-old American, who escaped a doping ban earlier this month on
a technicality, swept over the finish line in a world-leading personal
best of 9.76sec to claim his first major outdoor championship gold
medal.
Defending champion Justin Gatlin took silver in 9.89sec at the age of 37
while Canada's Andre De Grasse claimed bronze in 9.90sec.
It completed a flawless championship campaign for Coleman, who had been
the only man to duck under 10 seconds in both Friday's opening rounds
and Saturday's semi-finals.
Coleman's victory in perfect conditions at the Khalifa Stadium was never
in doubt, the stocky 2017 World Championships silver medallist
exploding out of the blocks to take the lead over the opening 20 metres.
The American let out a roar of triumph as he crossed the line before
punching the air in jubilation after a performance which makes him the
sixth fastest man in history.
"I am humble, I am just here to win titles," an elated Coleman said afterwards.
"It is an incredible time, it is a PR for me. I think the sky's the
limit, I think I still have a lot of things I can work on and improve, I
think I can keep dropping my time," added the 60m indoor world record
holder.
- Cleared on a technicality -
The victory was the culmination of a rollercoaster season for Coleman,
whose participation in the championships had been in doubt until only a
few weeks ago.
Coleman, who has strongly denied ever using performance-enhancing drugs,
was left facing a lengthy suspension in August after it emerged he had
registered three drug-testing "whereabouts" failures in a 12-month
period.
The violation is regarded as equivalent to a failed drug test and often followed by a ban of up to two years.
Yet Coleman avoided a sanction when the case against him was dropped in early September because of a technicality.
Coleman had recorded his first whereabouts failure on June 6 last year,
before two more offences in January 16 and April 26 this year.
However the United States Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) abruptly withdrew
the charges on September 2 after a review of the rules regarding how the
12-month window should be calculated.
Under an obscure regulation in the International Standard for Testing
and Investigations (ISTI) guidelines, Coleman's first missed case in
June last year should have been backdated to the first day of that
quarter, April 1, 2018.
That meant the dates of the three offences fell outside the required
12-month time-frame for a doping offence to have occurred -- leaving
Coleman in the clear and free to compete in Doha.
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