WORLD 100-metre champion Justin Gatlin fired coach Dennis Mitchell following an undercover investigation reported on Tuesday that appeared to show people linked to the sprinter offering to supply performance-enhancing drugs.
“I was shocked and surprised to learn that my coach would have anything to do with even the appearance of these current accusations,” Gatlin wrote in a post on his Instagram account. “I fired him as soon as I found out about this.”
The IAAF’s Athletics Integrity Unit said it is investigating the allegations in conjunction with the United States Anti-Doping Agency. The report was published in Tuesday’s edition of the British newspaper, The Daily Telegraph.
“These allegations are very serious,” said Brett Clothier, head of the AIU, “and strike at the heart of the integrity of athletics.”
IAAF President Sebastian Coe said the allegations are “extremely serious.”
The Telegraph reported that Mitchell and a track agent, Robert Wagner, met undercover reporters at a training camp in Florida and offered to supply and administer testosterone and human growth hormone for an actor training for a film, for a fee of $250,000.
The newspaper said Mitchell and Wagner were secretly recorded saying the use of banned substances in track was widespread.
Wagner called the newspaper report “deeply flawed” and said it was based on things he said that were not true.
“I made up the comments to impress them, led on by a make-believe scenario,” Wagner said in a statement to The Associated Press. “It was just big talk. I did not actually source or supply the substances the reporters asked for but stupidly claimed I could.”
Wagner also said he notified the Athletics Integrity Unit of the situation four weeks ago.
The 35-year-old Gatlin, who also won the 100–metres at the 2004 Athens Olympics, has served two doping bans in his career.
“I am not using and have not used PEDs,” Gatlin wrote in his Instagram post. “All legal options are on the table as I will not allow others to lie about me like this. I have no further comments as it is now a legal matter. They will next hear from my lawyer.”
Coe said the IAAF has started to focus on the “influences that surround athletes” and stressed that all support personnel are bound by the governing body’s anti-doping code and integrity code of conduct.