Nigeria's disqualification
from the event followed Tosin Adeloye's positive drugs test at the
Confederation of African Athletics (CAA) Super Grand Prix/Warri Relays in
Warri, Delta State on July 24, 2015.
The International
Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) have thrown Nigeria's 4x400m
women's relay team out of next month's Olympic Games in Brazil.
Adeloye was a member of the
Nigerian quartet that finished fourth in Beijing August last year at the IAAF
World Championships. In fact she ran the third leg in the semi-finals where the
team ran 3:23.27 seconds, the second fastest time in Nigeria's all-time record.
She also ran the third leg
in the final. Other members of the team were Regina Goerge who ran the first
leg, Funke Oladoye who ran the second leg and Patience Okon-George who anchored
the team to finish fourth.
Adeloye's positive drugs
test and subsequent ban for eight years means all the results she achieved from
the period she tested positive,individually and jointly will be annulled.
While the trio of
Okon-George, Margaret Bamgbose and Omolara Omotosho who have been picked by the
AFN may be in Rio after meeting the qualification standard for the open 400m, Regina George, who has
laboured to raise over $4,000 from the crowd-funding platform, Gofundme, is out
as she did not meet the standard and was going to Rio only as a member of the
relay team.
Nigeria benefited from a
similar scenario at the 2000 Olympics in Sydney, Australia when one of Team
USA's relay team members tested positive for a banned substance.Nigeria had her
silver win upgraded to gold.
The IAAF has removed the
times the Nigerian team ran in Beijing from the 2015 top list on its website.
Nigeria had qualified for
the event based on the aggregate of the two fastest times achieved by the
Okon-George's led team in the qualification period from January last year to
July this year.
Nigeria's two fastest times
(3:23.27 and 3:25.11) during the qualification period was achieved at the 2015
IAAF World Championships in Beijing which gave an average of 3:24.19 which made
Nigeria the ninth fastest nation in the event going to Brazil.
Nigeria's two other fast
times of 3:29.94 achieved in Durban last month and the 3:31.27A achieved in
Nairobi in April 2015 will not place among the best 16 nations eligible to
compete in Rio.
Must Nigeria be involve in every negative scandal
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