Coe defends Budapest as worlds venue, hails doping case
Sprinter Blessing Okagbare has been given an additional one-year ban for doping violations on top of her existing 10-year suspension, a decision that rules Nigeria out of the sprint relay at the world championships.
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World Athletics president Sebastian Coe has defended the
choice of Hungary's capital Budapest to host this month's world championships
and also said the sport's latest doping case was actually a reason to
celebrate.
Hungary's far-right Prime Minister Viktor Orban is strongly
opposed to what he calls the European Union's "LGBT+ offensive" and
last month the US ambassador to Hungary blasted him for opportunistically
stirring up hatred against gay people.
Coe, speaking to selected reporters on a conference call
ahead of the August 19-27 championships, said: "The world is a complex
place, it's becoming more complex by the year and that isn't going to change.
"So, one thing that does need to adapt here is sport and
sport is ultimately probably the most adaptable organism that is out there and
in an uncertain world sport is the only anchor point."
The International Olympic Committee has argued in the past
that taking the Games to countries such as China would help accelerate a
greater respect of human rights.
Athletics itself held its world championships in 2019 in
Doha, the capital of Qatar, whose own approach to human rights came under
intense scrutiny when it hosted the 2022 men's football World Cup.
Coe, the head of the largest Olympic sport, said his ideas
and those of the IOC "don't always run in parallel" -- but he added:
"On this one, I agree."
"Do countries use sport? Of course, they do?" he
said.
"One thing I can tell you is that I have never, ever
been involved in sport that has gone anywhere, particularly into challenging
environments, where it has left that society politically, culturally, socially
worse off for being there."
Athletics was dealt a blow in July when women's 100m hurdles
world record holder Tobi Amusan of Nigeria, the reigning world champion from
last year, was charged with an alleged anti-doping whereabouts rule violation.
Coe argued that far from tarnishing the sport's reputation,
such cases "lend confidence".
"Our sport has improved its reputation more than any
other sport in the last two years by a distance because we have been prepared
to tackle the issues around doping," he said.
"I would much prefer to have the occasional headline
which none of us actually want than the knowledge that we were gently declining
into a landscape where we didn't have the systems in place to weed out the
people we don't want in the sport."
It was, he said, "not brain surgery" for athletes
to identify "one hour a day where they are going to be" so
anti-doping testers can locate them.
Looking ahead to the action in Budapest, Coe said the handful
of world records set so far this season suggested "these have the
potential to be the best world championships performance-wise of all
time".
Coe picked out the men's shot put as an event he was looking
forward to.
Ryan Crouser of the United States set a new world record of
23.56m in May. "He is in the form of his life again," Coe said.
"The men's shot put from 2019 onwards has been unmissable."
Coe, the double Olympic 1,500m gold medallist, identified the
women's middle distance events as the track events to watch.
Reigning champion Athing Mu of the USA against British
challenger Keely Hodgkinson in the women's 800m would be one highlight and
Faith Kipyegon, the Kenyan who has set world records at the 1,500m, mile and
5,000m -- outstanding performances -- was another, Coe said.


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