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Aussie's ‘shattering' twist as Paris 2024 gold medal stripped

Aussie's ‘shattering' twist as Paris 2024 gold medal stripped

Perth Now3 days ago

'Shattered' Australian Paralympic runner Jaryd Clifford has spoken out after his top rival was banned for doping and stripped of his Paris 2024 gold medal.
It was revealed last month that Spain's Yassine Ouhdadi had tested positive for the banned anabolic steroid Clostebol from a sample collected one month before last year's Paralympics.
Only now has the International Paralympic Committee handed down its ruling, blaming the 'substantial delay' on 'an administrative error by a third party'.
Ouhdadi will forfeit his 5000m T13 gold medal because the tainted sample was provided before the Paralympics.
But Clifford, overtaken by Ouhdadi on the last lap, will not benefit having been disqualified from his bronze medal position soon after the race.
He was scratched from the results because he released the tether linking him to guide Matt Clarke as they crossed the finish line, and later told he had no grounds to launch an appeal.
'I had a brain fade with a metre to go, dropping the tether that was probably the laziest moment of my career,' Clifford said at the time.
'I just wanted to run through that line, I wished the dive had been earlier but that's sport, man ... it's so tough, four years to go back to the drawing board.'
Learning that Ouhdadi should never have been running in Paris has now devastated Clifford, who was also beaten to gold by the Spaniard at the Tokyo Paralympics in 2021 and the world championships in 2023.
'It's hard to find the words for this, but I'll try,' Clifford wrote on Tuesday.
Clifford still accepts that he was ultimately responsible for his disqualification after dropping the tether.
But Ouhdadi's presence in the race has been a tough pill to swallow in the wake of the positive doping test.
'Due to my disqualification I cannot be elevated to a new position,' the Australian said.
'I'm pretty shattered. My races against Yassine have changed my life. It's taken a lot of strength to move forward from these moments in my career, particularly that race in Paris last year.
'Without Yassine in that 5000m, it's hard not to think about how different that last lap might have played out. Everything leading into that race was about beating him and only when he went past us on that last lap did everything begin to unravel.
'To think that holding on for a silver that day would be a gold today feels like another kick in the guts.'
After being passed by Ouhdadi, Clifford was also overhauled by Aleksandr Kostin — and the Russian neutral athlete has now been promoted to gold.
Anton Kuliatin, another Russian neutral athlete, was promoted to bronze by Clifford's disqualification and has moved up again to silver. Clifford also missed out on a medal in the 1500m final. Credit: Ulrik Pedersen/Cal Sport Media
Three days after the controversial 5000m final, Clifford suffered more heartache in the 1500m when he fell 0.01 seconds short of bronze.
Kostin won that final, with Kuliatin edging out Clifford for bronze, while Ouhdadi's fifth-place finish will be wiped as a result of his doping ban.
The Australian will now hope to enjoy a winning moment at the Los Angeles 2028 Paralympics — potentially over Ouhdadi, whose ban was backdated and will expire in September 2027.
'I'm determined to keep my focus on the future,' Clifford wrote.
'I had always reflected on those moments with sadness and frustration, but I learnt a lot from falling short too.
'No matter how much you revise the official results you can never change how a race made you feel.
'When I dream of winning a gold medal, I don't dream about the dot-point on the resume. I dream about the moment crossing the line knowing that all the hard work finally paid off.
'I can't control the past, but I can control the chance I give myself to fight for those moments in the future.
'I was able to pick myself up off the track in Paris last year because I knew I had an army there to dust me off and get me back on my feet.
'I feel so much love from so many places, but particularly the communities that have been there every step of the way. It means the world to have you all in my corner.
'I love nothing more than pulling on that green and gold singlet and giving it everything I've got. That will never change. Bring on the next four years!'
Clifford broke his own 1500m T12 world record with a 3:40.39 run on Sunday, taking just shy of a second off his previous mark from 2021.
He said it is 'such a relief' to have bounced back from injuries and setbacks in recent years.
'I haven't run a PB in the 1500m in over four years so hearing that time was very special,' Clifford said.
He will now turn his attentions to the 2025 world championships in September, with Ouhdadi out of the picture.

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Coco Gauff huffed and puffed into the French Open semi-finals with a 6-7 (8-6) 6-4 6-1 victory against fellow American Madison Keys in a error-infested match both players will quickly want to forget. More than half of Gauff's points came from the Australian Open champion soft mistakes and the world No.2 got away with a total of 10 double faults. Altogether there were over a 100 errors. The 21-year-old will need to make dramatic adjustments when she faces either France's Lois Boisson or Russian sixth seed Mirra Andreeva for a place in Sunday's final. Keys, who was looking to reach the last four at Roland Garros for the second time after 2018, bowed out with her 60th unforced error to end a forgettable contest. "I'm happy to get through this match today, I have a lot more work to do, I'll be ready tomorrow," Gauff said. "I changed something at 4-1 (in the first set). It's tough to play against her because she hits the ball so fast, so low, I was just trying to fight for every point ... to get the ball to the other side of the net." Gauff, who reached the final here in 2022, is the youngest woman to claim 25 main-draw wins at Roland Garros since Martina Hingis (1995-2000). The opening set was a scrappy affair, with the first three games going against serve. Keys secured the first hold to lead 3-1 and broke again before Gauff clawed back a break and held for the first time to close the gap to 4-3. In a flurry of breaks, Gauff levelled at 4-4 and held once more to edge ahead, putting the pressure on Keys, who saved a set point to force a tiebreak. While the quality was patchy at best, the drama was undeniable, with momentum swinging wildly. In the end, Keys edged the tiebreak as Gauff double-faulted three times, handing the opener to her opponent. Things did not get better in the second set. "So many unforced errors," Gauff said on court, in one of the understatements of the season. She levelled the contest as Keys looked out of sorts and cantered through the decider. Coco Gauff huffed and puffed into the French Open semi-finals with a 6-7 (8-6) 6-4 6-1 victory against fellow American Madison Keys in a error-infested match both players will quickly want to forget. More than half of Gauff's points came from the Australian Open champion soft mistakes and the world No.2 got away with a total of 10 double faults. Altogether there were over a 100 errors. The 21-year-old will need to make dramatic adjustments when she faces either France's Lois Boisson or Russian sixth seed Mirra Andreeva for a place in Sunday's final. Keys, who was looking to reach the last four at Roland Garros for the second time after 2018, bowed out with her 60th unforced error to end a forgettable contest. "I'm happy to get through this match today, I have a lot more work to do, I'll be ready tomorrow," Gauff said. "I changed something at 4-1 (in the first set). It's tough to play against her because she hits the ball so fast, so low, I was just trying to fight for every point ... to get the ball to the other side of the net." Gauff, who reached the final here in 2022, is the youngest woman to claim 25 main-draw wins at Roland Garros since Martina Hingis (1995-2000). The opening set was a scrappy affair, with the first three games going against serve. Keys secured the first hold to lead 3-1 and broke again before Gauff clawed back a break and held for the first time to close the gap to 4-3. In a flurry of breaks, Gauff levelled at 4-4 and held once more to edge ahead, putting the pressure on Keys, who saved a set point to force a tiebreak. While the quality was patchy at best, the drama was undeniable, with momentum swinging wildly. In the end, Keys edged the tiebreak as Gauff double-faulted three times, handing the opener to her opponent. Things did not get better in the second set. "So many unforced errors," Gauff said on court, in one of the understatements of the season. She levelled the contest as Keys looked out of sorts and cantered through the decider. Coco Gauff huffed and puffed into the French Open semi-finals with a 6-7 (8-6) 6-4 6-1 victory against fellow American Madison Keys in a error-infested match both players will quickly want to forget. More than half of Gauff's points came from the Australian Open champion soft mistakes and the world No.2 got away with a total of 10 double faults. Altogether there were over a 100 errors. The 21-year-old will need to make dramatic adjustments when she faces either France's Lois Boisson or Russian sixth seed Mirra Andreeva for a place in Sunday's final. Keys, who was looking to reach the last four at Roland Garros for the second time after 2018, bowed out with her 60th unforced error to end a forgettable contest. "I'm happy to get through this match today, I have a lot more work to do, I'll be ready tomorrow," Gauff said. "I changed something at 4-1 (in the first set). It's tough to play against her because she hits the ball so fast, so low, I was just trying to fight for every point ... to get the ball to the other side of the net." Gauff, who reached the final here in 2022, is the youngest woman to claim 25 main-draw wins at Roland Garros since Martina Hingis (1995-2000). The opening set was a scrappy affair, with the first three games going against serve. Keys secured the first hold to lead 3-1 and broke again before Gauff clawed back a break and held for the first time to close the gap to 4-3. In a flurry of breaks, Gauff levelled at 4-4 and held once more to edge ahead, putting the pressure on Keys, who saved a set point to force a tiebreak. While the quality was patchy at best, the drama was undeniable, with momentum swinging wildly. In the end, Keys edged the tiebreak as Gauff double-faulted three times, handing the opener to her opponent. Things did not get better in the second set. "So many unforced errors," Gauff said on court, in one of the understatements of the season. She levelled the contest as Keys looked out of sorts and cantered through the decider. Coco Gauff huffed and puffed into the French Open semi-finals with a 6-7 (8-6) 6-4 6-1 victory against fellow American Madison Keys in a error-infested match both players will quickly want to forget. More than half of Gauff's points came from the Australian Open champion soft mistakes and the world No.2 got away with a total of 10 double faults. Altogether there were over a 100 errors. The 21-year-old will need to make dramatic adjustments when she faces either France's Lois Boisson or Russian sixth seed Mirra Andreeva for a place in Sunday's final. Keys, who was looking to reach the last four at Roland Garros for the second time after 2018, bowed out with her 60th unforced error to end a forgettable contest. "I'm happy to get through this match today, I have a lot more work to do, I'll be ready tomorrow," Gauff said. "I changed something at 4-1 (in the first set). It's tough to play against her because she hits the ball so fast, so low, I was just trying to fight for every point ... to get the ball to the other side of the net." Gauff, who reached the final here in 2022, is the youngest woman to claim 25 main-draw wins at Roland Garros since Martina Hingis (1995-2000). The opening set was a scrappy affair, with the first three games going against serve. Keys secured the first hold to lead 3-1 and broke again before Gauff clawed back a break and held for the first time to close the gap to 4-3. In a flurry of breaks, Gauff levelled at 4-4 and held once more to edge ahead, putting the pressure on Keys, who saved a set point to force a tiebreak. While the quality was patchy at best, the drama was undeniable, with momentum swinging wildly. In the end, Keys edged the tiebreak as Gauff double-faulted three times, handing the opener to her opponent. Things did not get better in the second set. "So many unforced errors," Gauff said on court, in one of the understatements of the season. She levelled the contest as Keys looked out of sorts and cantered through the decider.

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