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Ben Johnson’s Steroid Use Told

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From Reuters

Ben Johnson’s personal physician has said the disgraced Olympic sprinter took a banned steroid on one occasion four months before the Seoul Olympics last year, the Toronto Star newspaper reported today.

Dr. Jamie Astaphan, in a telephone interview from the Caribbean island of St. Kitts, said Johnson was depressed last May by a hamstring injury that threatened to end his rivalry against Carl Lewis for the 100 meters Olympics gold medal.

“He bought stanozolol or somebody bought it for him in Toronto,” Astaphan told the newspaper. But immediately after taking it Johnson suffered “violent muscle spasms.”

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“He was immediately brought to me and I nursed him back to top condition,” he said.

Astaphan said Johnson was not on stanozolol when he beat Lewis in a world-record time of 9.79 seconds for the 100 meters gold, a medal taken away from him when he then tested positive for stanozolol use by Olympics officials.

Asked how he could be certain, Astaphan replied: “I must admit that even though I am his personal physician, there’s no way I can keep a constant check on him.

“But it would not make any sense for an athlete to go back on a drug which a few months previously could have ruined him for life.”

Johnson has said he never knowingly took performance-enhancing drugs. Astaphan has denied he ever prescribed such drugs to Johnson or other athletes on Canada’s Olympics team.

The Johnson scandal prompted Canada to call an inquiry into drug use in amateur sport that resumes hearings in Toronto next Wednesday.

Commission counsel Robert Armstrong said it was “totally irresponsible that Dr. Astaphan made such statements outside of the commission and not under oath where they are available to be tested by cross-examination.”

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