logo
French Olympic fencer Ysaora Thibus escapes doping ban with kissing defense

French Olympic fencer Ysaora Thibus escapes doping ban with kissing defense

New York Post6 days ago
Doping? Nope, just kissing.
The Court of Arbitration for Sport cleared French Olympic fencer Ysaora Thibus of doping charges after judges determined the contamination in her system came from kissing her former partner.
The 33-year-old was initially suspended from fencing in early 2024 by the International Testing Agency after a test at the 2024 Challenge International de Paris showed ostarine, a selective androgen receptor modulator which can promote muscle and bone growth that is prohibited by the World Anti-Doping Agency, present in the results.
Advertisement
3 Ysaora Thibus competed in the 2024 olympics.
AP
'The CAS Panel considered the evidence and noted that it is scientifically established that the intake of an ostarine dose similar to the dose ingested by Ms. Thibus' then partner would have left sufficient amounts of ostarine in the saliva to contaminate a person through kissing,' CAS wrote in a release on Monday.
'The Panel also accepted that Ms. Thibus' then partner was taking ostarine from 5 January 2024, and that there was contamination over 9 days with a cumulative effect. The Panel excluded that Ms Thibus intentionally ingested the ostarine in addition to being contaminated.'
Advertisement
After being cleared initially to compete for France at the 2024 Olympic Games in Paris, where she finished fifth in the team foil event and 28th in the individual foil event, WADA appealed the decision, attempting to reject Thibus' kissing argument.
The CAS then held a hearing for Thibus, a silver medalist at the Tokyo Games in 2021, in Switzerland in March, at which WADA requested four years of ineligibility.
3 Thibus attending the 40 Femmes Forbes event in March.
Getty Images for Forbes France
Thibus' partner at the time was consuming ostarine without her knowledge.
Advertisement
'The CAS Panel ruled that the [antidoping rule violation] for the presence of ostarine was not intentional, and that it is not questionable that Ms. Thibus bears no fault or negligence,' the governing body concluded.
Thibus' defense -— and the subsequent CAS decision — are not unheard of when it comes to athletes and drug tests.
3 Ysaora Thibus at the French National Olympic Committee's Evening of Champions.
AFP via Getty Images
In 2009, Richard Gasquet escaped a doping ban when the tennis player convinced the International Tennis Federation he inadvertently took cocaine by kissing a woman in a nightclub.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

PSG coach Luis Enrique explains postgame altercation with Chelsea's João Pedro
PSG coach Luis Enrique explains postgame altercation with Chelsea's João Pedro

USA Today

time21 minutes ago

  • USA Today

PSG coach Luis Enrique explains postgame altercation with Chelsea's João Pedro

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — He was trying to break things up, that's what Luis Enrique is going with. Moments after Paris Saint-Germain lost its bid to cap a historic season in a 3-0 defeat in the Club World Cup against Chelsea, Enrique, the PSG manager, took a swipe at Chelsea striker João Pedro during a postgame altercation, striking him near his neck and chin. Just before that confrontation, Enrique approached Pedro, who was having a discussion with PSG goalkeeper Gianluigi Donnarumma. As Enrique seemingly tried to calm tensions, Pedro swatted Enrique's hands away, leading to Enrique making the contact near Pedro's head. 'At the end of the match there was a situation that I think was totally avoidable, for everyone involved,' Enrique said in Spanish during his post-match press conference 'My objective and intention, like always, was to separate the players to avoid further problems. There was a lot of tension, a lot of passion. There was shoving going on and I think we should avoid that and it should never happen again. 'But I repeat: my intention was to avoid things getting worse.' The incident seemed to simmer from a series of physical challenges toward the end of the match. Paris Saint-Germain, clearly frustrated with its impending defeat, was enforced for two yellow cards and a third that was overturned on review to a red in the final 10 minutes of the match. During the sequence that led to the red card, PSG midfielder João Neves tugged on Chelsea defender Marc Cucurella's hair, pulling him to the turf. 'I don't need to say anything about them because it's normal,' Pedro said after the match. 'Everyone wants to win the game, and in the end, I think they lose their head. But this is football. This has happened. Now we need to enjoy because we won the tournament.' Chelsea manager Enzo Maresca said he missed the altercation because he was congratulating Paris Saint-Germain's players. PSG was trying to conclude a historic season with another honor, after they won the French league, the French Cup, the French Super Cup and the club's first-ever UEFA Champions League title in late May. It was evident, from very early on, that Chelsea was a real threat to unseat Paris Saint-Germain's string of successes. Just seven-and-a-half minutes into the match, midfielder Cole Palmer hooked a left-footed shot that just slid past the left post. By the half-hour mark, Palmer would have a pair of goals, and Chelsea would be hammering PSG on its half, smothering it with relentless pressure. 'Well, this is how soccer is sometimes,' Enrique said in French. 'I'll need to review the film to comprehensively analyze what happened, but they started the match very well, with aggressive pressure and we had difficulty matching that. From there, we had a few chances to score, but it was not in the cards.'

PSG coach in middle of heated post-match scuffle with Chelsea after FIFA Club World Cup final
PSG coach in middle of heated post-match scuffle with Chelsea after FIFA Club World Cup final

New York Post

time3 hours ago

  • New York Post

PSG coach in middle of heated post-match scuffle with Chelsea after FIFA Club World Cup final

Chelsea and Paris Saint-Germain looked like bitter rivals by the end of the FIFA Club World Cup final on Sunday after the Premier League club toppled the French club in a 3-0 victory. But after the whistle sounded, the action didn't stop, with PSG coach Luis Enrique pushing João Pedro amid a scrum that was already occurring at MetLife Stadium. Pedro went to the ground, drawing more players into the post-match shenanigans and creating a pushing and shoving match before cooler heads eventually prevailed. Pedro had been engaged in a verbal confrontation with another PSG player when Enrique entered the fray and shoved the Chelsea player. PSG goalkeeper Gianluigi Donnarumma, who also appeared to shove Pedro, was caught in the middle of the incident and was grabbed by a team staffer to try and protect him as other Chelsea players came to Pedro's defense. 5 Paris Saint-Germain goalkeeper Gianluigi Donnarumma (1) reacts after an altercation with Chelsea players after the final during the final of the 2025 FIFA Club World Cup at MetLife Stadium. Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images 5 Filip Joergensen #12 of Chelsea FC clashes with players of Paris Saint-Germain following the FIFA Club World Cup 2025 Final match between Chelsea FC and Paris Saint-Germain at MetLife Stadium on July 13, 2025 FIFA via Getty Images 5 Paris Saint-Germain defender Nuno Mendes (25) reacts after an altercation with Chelsea players after the final during the final of the 2025 FIFA Club World Cup at MetLife Stadium. Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images Prior to Sunday, Chelsea and PSG had played a total of 10 times across all competitions and had not played one another since 2016. The Club World Cup final took place at MetLife Stadium in front of a largely pro-Chelsea crowd of over 81,000 people. The win was a surprise with PSG entering the match as the favorite after having defeated some of soccer's best clubs, including Atlético Madrid, Bayern Munich and Real Madrid. 5 Chelsea FC forward Joao Pedro (20) clashes with Paris Saint-Germain goalkeeper Gianluigi Donnarumma (1) after the final of the 2025 FIFA Club World Cup at MetLife Stadium. Amanda Perobelli-Reuters via Imagn Images 5 Robert Sanchez #1 of Chelsea FC clashes with Gianluigi Donnarumma #1 of Paris Saint-Germain following the FIFA Club World Cup 2025 Final match between Chelsea FC and Paris Saint-Germain at MetLife Stadium on July 13, 2025 in East Rutherford, New Jersey. FIFA via Getty Images Tensions had already been a bit high during the physical match and in the second half, PSG midfielder João Neves was given a red card when he pulled the hair of Chelsea's Marc Cucurella in a retaliatory move. Chelsea defeated PSG with a pair of goals by star Cole Palmer – in the 22nd and 30th minutes – while Pedro also scored in the later part of the first half.

French prisoner escapes by hiding in sprung cellmate's laundry bag: ‘Accumulation of errors'
French prisoner escapes by hiding in sprung cellmate's laundry bag: ‘Accumulation of errors'

New York Post

time3 hours ago

  • New York Post

French prisoner escapes by hiding in sprung cellmate's laundry bag: ‘Accumulation of errors'

Someone should be sacked for this. An inmate in France is on the loose after escaping prison by crawling into the laundry bag of his cellmate, who had recently been released. The 20-year-old prisoner escaped from Corbas prison in Lyon, France and has yet to be recaptured. REUTERS The 20-year-old man, whose identity was not released, 'took advantage' of his fellow inmate to free himself from confinement, French prison administration director Sébastien Cauwel told BFMTV. The escapee was under investigation for a number of crimes, including alleged connections with organized crime, the prison administration said in a statement to AFP. Corbas is notoriously overcrowded — housing around 170% of its capacity of 678 inmates. AP Cauwel said he 'immediately requested an internal investigation' after the prisoner flew the coop, which wasn't noticed by staff at the Corbas prison for around 24 hours. Corbas, located in Lyon, is severely overcrowded — housing around 1,200 inmates — 170% of its capacity for 678, officials said, which Cauwel admitted 'makes working conditions more difficult for our staff.' He told the outlet the incident was the result of 'an accumulation of errors,' and a 'series of serious malfunctions,' which he promised the investigation would bring to light. 'This is an extremely rare event that we have never experienced in this administration,' he said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store