Chambers says he felt like a leper
Sprinter Dwain Chambers has hit back at those criticising his selection for Britain's indoor world championship team, saying he is being made to feel like a leper. Chambers was named in the team for next month's event in Valencia on Tuesday after...
Sprinter Dwain Chambers has hit back at those criticising his selection for Britain's indoor world championship team, saying he is being made to feel like a leper.
Chambers was named in the team for next month's event in Valencia on Tuesday after emphatically winning the British trials but UK Athletics said the selection committee was unanimous in its desire not to include him and did so only because they felt there was no alternative.
Chambers served a two-year ban after testing positive for the banned steroid THB in 2003 and, after an initial comeback was curtailed by a move to American football, returned to the sport last year.
UK Athletics wanted to ban him from the British trials because they said he had not undergone regular drug testing but the IAAF overruled them.
"I'm being made to feel like a leper," Chambers said yesterday.
"A terrible stigma has been attached to me but people need to know I am clean. Yes, I did something wrong but I've done my time and now I've moved on.
"Every morning I wake up knowing I have not fulfilled my potential, and that's all I'm trying to do now. I believe I have two more years ahead of me," said the 29-year-old.
"Other people are allowed to get on with their lives once they have served a punishment, so why can't I get on with mine?
"At the moment, I am doing everything on my own. I am training from a local park, without a coach. Imagine what times I could do if I was back on the tracks, with a proper trainer and support.
"I respect people have opinions about me and they are entitled to those. I'm not going to get into a slanging match with them.
"But they should remember I'm only doing what I'm legally entitled to do. If the law forbade me from running, I wouldn't be doing it."
Legal or not, Chambers' comeback was greeted with dismay by many former athletes, including Sebastian Coe, chairman of Britain's 2012 Olympic committee .
"I don't think you reach redemption by being selected for the next available championships," said Coe, a double Olympic 1,500 metres champion.
"You have to put a bit back in. I would have had more sympathy with the rehabilitation argument a few years ago but now there is no ambiguity about this.
"If we're not careful people will vote with their feet. Parents will not want kids going into a sport that they think is remotely ambivalent about the subject of doping."
Former 400 metres Olympic silver medallist Roger Black said: "He is now a shining example of 'give it a go, if you get caught, it doesn't matter, you can come back'.
"You know the score as an athlete. If you cross the line, you should walk away.
"If you risk it and you cheat, you shouldn't be back."