
US Cycling Athlete, Webster, Accepts Sanction For Doping Violation
Joshua Webster of San Dimas, California, an athlete in the sport of cycling, has tested positive for prohibited substances and accepted a suspension for his doping offense.
Joshua Webster of San Dimas, California, an athlete in the sport of cycling, has tested positive for prohibited substances and accepted a suspension for his doping offense.
Lisban Quintero of New York, New York, an athlete in the sport of Cycling, has tested positive for a prohibited substance and accepted a suspension for his doping offense.
Philip Zajicek of Boulder, Colorado, an athlete in the sport of cycling, has admitted to a second doping offense for purchasing erythropoietin (EPO), and a third doping offense for providing false testimony at an American Arbitration Association (AAA) panel hearing.
Peter Cannell, an athlete in the sport of cycling, has accepted a two-year suspension for violating the applicable sport anti-doping rules.
U.S. cycling athlete, Andrew Tilin, of Oakland, California, has accepted a two-year period of ineligibility for an anti-doping rule violation.
The Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) based in Lausanne, Switzerland, rendered its decision in the appeal, filed by cyclist Flavia Oliveira, of an earlier American Arbitration Association (AAA) arbitration award finding Oliveira committed an anti-doping rule violation.
U.S. cycling athlete, Charles “Chuck” Coyle, of Boulder, Colorado, has accepted a two-year period of ineligibility for an anti- doping rule violation.
Neal Schubel, an athlete in the sport of cycling, of Saginaw, Michigan, has accepted a two-year period of ineligibility for an anti-doping rule violation.
Kirk O’Bee, a U.S. athlete in the sport of cycling, has received a lifetime suspension for a second doping offense based on his use of synthetic erythropoietin (EPO) and human growth hormone (hGH).
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