 Baptiste free to compete after doping ban lifted.
Baptiste free to compete after doping ban lifted.
Sprinter Kelly-Ann Baptiste is eligible to compete again.
Baptiste had been banned after testing positive for a prohibited substance. The sample was collected in April 2013.
Like  her training partner, American Tyson Gay, Baptiste cooperated with a  United States Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) investigation. But while Gay  served a one-year ban, the International Association of Athletics  Federations (IAAF) appealed an August 12, 2014 decision by the National  Association of Athletics Administrations (NAAA) disciplinary panel to  lift the ban on Baptiste. At that point, Trinidad and Tobago’s  Florida-based sprint queen had already served a 16-month period of  ineligibility.
NAAA president Ephraim Serrette told the  Express, yesterday, that the IAAF’s appeal to the Court of Arbitration  for Sport (CAS) was ruled on earlier this month. However, in a press  release from public relations officer Peter Samuel, the NAAA said  details of the CAS settlement will not be made public.
“The  National Association of Athletics Administrations (NAAA) can confirm  that the Kelly-Ann Baptiste case has been resolved before the Court of  Arbitration for Sport (“CAS”), based in Lausanne, Switzerland.
“Further  to the confidentiality provisions applicable to the proceedings, the  Award of the CAS will not be made public. However, the NAAA can confirm  that Ms Baptiste is free to return to competition with immediate  effect.”
Serrette said that his interpretation of the CAS  ruling is that the earlier decision of the NAAA disciplinary panel to  lift the ban on Baptiste was “a correct decision”.
“We acted in accordance with precedent set, and we would have been correct. It’s very unfair to Kelly-Ann.”
However,  chairman of the NAAA disciplinary panel, sports lawyer J Tyrone Marcus  told the Express “it might be a bit too premature to say” Baptiste was  unjustly treated, based on the one-year ban handed to Gay.
“It’s still early days. More time has to pass, and more substantial assistance cases heard, so that a trend can be recognised.”
Baptiste  is expected to be stripped of the two national records she had  established at the 2013 National Championships. She clocked 10.83  seconds in the 100m final and 22.36 in the 200m championship race. If  those two marks are annulled, Baptiste’s next best 100m clocking, 10.84  seconds would return to the record books, while Semoy Hackett’s 22.55  run from May 26, 2012 would be recognised as the national 200m record.
Hackett is currently serving a doping ban, and will be eligible to compete again on May 1.
