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Angry Christie makes racism claim

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  • Angry Christie makes racism claim

    Angry Christie makes racism claim



    Christie was voted BBC Sports Personality of the Year in 1993


    Former Olympic champion Linford Christie has claimed there is "institutionalised racism" in Britain.

    And Christie, who won 100 metres gold at the 1992 Olympics, is adamant he should have carried the Olympic torch on its way through London in April.

    "I think there's institutionalised racism in this country," Christie told BBC Radio 4. "How many black knights from British athletics do you know?
    I've achieved more single-handedly than any other sportsman in this country."

    Christie was banned for life by the British Olympic Association in 1999 after he failed a routine drugs test.

    That test came following an indoor meet in Germany at a time when he was in semi-retirement from racing, but he has always denied intentionally taking performance-enhancing drugs.


    I have nothing good to say about Sebastian Coe at all, absolutely nothing



    Linford Christie

    The Jamaican-born Londoner, however, had already been cleared of an earlier offence when he tested positive for pseudoephedrine at the 1988 Olympics.

    The International Olympic Committee voted by an 11-10 margin to accept his explanation that the substance had come from a legal ginseng drink.

    The British authorities also accepted his 1999 explanation that tainted supplements caused his positive test but the sport's governing body rejected his claim and banned him for two years.

    Christie believes the doping controversy has led to him failing to get the recognition he feels he deserves.

    "If you look to what we've achieved in sport all this, nandrolone [the drug he was banned for taking] and all this thing aside, how many black knights have we had in British athletics?" he told the On The Ropes programme.

    "I've achieved more single-handedly, I'd say, than any other athlete or any other sportsman in this country."

    Christie is the only Briton to have won 100m gold at the Olympics, Commonwealth Games, European and World Championships.

    Given his record, he feels he should have been included in the group of around 80 athletes, former athletes and celebrities who carried the torch through London.

    "For me, I look at track and field and what I did in the sport, it's like going to war," he said.

    "I went out there and I battled against other countries and put British sprinting on the map and so therefore I don't think it's something I should want to do, I think it's something I should be asked to do."

    606: DEBATE
    Are Christie's comments justified?

    Chirstie also fired another salvo in his long feud with Lord Coe, the chairman of London 2012's organising committee, questioning what he had done for British athletics.

    "I'm still bitter about him, I cannot stand the guy and, to be honest, I wish we didn't even talk about it because I have nothing good to say about Sebastian Coe at all, absolutely nothing," said Christie.

    Their bitter dispute stems from a newspaper article Coe wrote in 2001 which criticised Christie's attitude towards the sport, his suitability as a role model and his "boorish behaviour" on the track.

    Coe also attacked his captaincy of the British athletics team, saying: "I sat in one team meeting when (Christie) made himself deliberately unintelligible to all but those who had a passing knowledge of jive."

    Christie reacted furiously to this claim and suggested Coe's criticism had a "racial connotation". The 48-year-old now owns Nuff Respect, a management company, and mentors and coaches young athletes.

    Listen to the full interview on BBC Radio 4's On The Ropes on Sunday 22 June at 1330
    Last edited by Karl; June 19, 2008, 07:54 PM.
    THERE IS ONLY ONE ONANDI LOWE!

    "Good things come out of the garrisons" after his daughter won the 100m Gold For Jamaica.


    "It therefore is useless and pointless, unless it is for share malice and victimisation to arrest and charge a 92-year-old man for such a simple offence. There is nothing morally wrong with this man smoking a spliff; the only thing wrong is that it is still on the law books," said Chevannes.

  • #2
    Christie win is scratched from Olympic champions' pantheon

    Linford Christie win is scratched from Olympic champions' pantheon

    By Ashling O'Connor, Olympics Correspondent

    The moment that Linford Christie, eyes bulging and muscled arms held aloft, powered over the finish line to win the 100 metres gold medal in Barcelona is for many a defining moment in British sporting history.
    But not for Olympic chiefs, who were accused yesterday of trying to scrub the controversial sprinter's achievement from the nation's memory after he failed a drugs test in the twilight of his career.
    The British Olympic Association (BOA) influenced a public opinion poll to ensure that Christie did not make the cut as one of Britain's six favourite Olympians, it emerged yesterday.
    As the six winners, to be included on a 2012 National Lottery scratchcard, were unveiled, the BOA admitted that it deliberately omitted Christie from a “prompt list” supplied for the Ipsos-MORI poll commissioned by Camelot, the lottery operator.
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    This was despite the poll finding that the Jamaican-born sprinter's gold medal-winning performance ranked in the top three, behind Kelly Holmes's double 800m and 1500m feat in Athens and Steve Redgrave's unprecedented fifth consecutive gold medal for rowing at the 2000 Sydney Games. In the minds of the public, Christie's victory over a strong field in 1992 was greater than the moment Sebastian Coe beat Steve Cram, who was the world record holder, in the 1500m final in Los Angeles in 1984.
    Yet in a glitzy presentation at Bafta in London, Christie did not even warrant a mention alongside other past gold medal winners who failed to be voted Britain's favourite Olympians.
    Lord Coe, the chairman of the London Olympics organising committee whose long-running feud with Christie was famously aired live on radio, will grace the new scratchcard to help to raise funds for the 2012 Games.
    The other five are Redgrave, Holmes, Jonathan Edwards, the 2000 Olympic triple jump champion, Duncan Goodhew, the 1980 100m breaststroke Olympic champion, and Sally Gunnell, the 400m hurdle champion in Barcelona. Gunnell's inclusion is notable because she was the captain of the British women's team in Barcelona while Christie led the men's team.
    Camelot insisted that the top six were a spontaneous choice by the 2,000 people interviewed but admitted that a suggestive shortlist for those with no firm opinion did not include Christie.
    Under BOA rules, no athlete with a doping ban, even expired, will ever represent Britain at an Olympics.
    Christie, a former BBC Sports Personality of the Year, was persuaded to come out of retirement for an indoor meet in Germany in 1999 where a routine drugs test found traces of nandrolone, the banned steroid, in his urine.
    He was suspended from competition for two years although he has always maintained his innocence. His gold medal at Barcelona still stands, as does his British record of 9.87 seconds.
    He remains the only British man to win Olympic, World, Commonwealth and European 100m gold medals.
    Winning means you're willing to go longer, work harder, and give more than anyone else - Vince Lombardi

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