China’s anti-doping agency (CHINADA) has accused The New York Times of “politicizing doping issues,” according to a new report from Reuters.
China has accused The Times of trying to “affect the psychology” of Chinese athletes at the 2024 Paris Olympic Games.
The newspaper reported that two Chinese swimmers tested positive for a banned steroid, but the suspensions were lifted when the source of the positive tests got traced to contaminated foods.
“(The New York Times’) main purpose is to disrupt the order of the Paris Olympic swimming competition, affect the psychology of Chinese athletes and weaken their competitive ability,” CHINADA said in a statement on Wednesday.
“This is extremely unfair and immoral.”
The Times, however, refused to back down from the report.
“We are confident in the accuracy of our reporting,” a spokesperson said in a statement to Reuters.
China cited doping contamination in meat products, which they said is “a common problem worldwide,” according to Reuters.
“Relevant research shows that trenbolone is a protein anabolic preparation that has a strong effect of improving strength and explosive power, and is not a common contaminant,” CHINADA said.
China, as of Friday morning, had amassed an eye-popping 13 gold medals at the Paris Games.
[Reuters]

About DJ Byrnes
Recent Posts
Giannis Antetokounmpo focused on current teammates, health
"I'm still locked in."
Puka Nacua apologizes: ‘I had no idea’
"I deeply apologize to anyone who was offended."
Bears search for new stadium turning ugly
"Our fans deserve a world-class stadium."
Legendary boxer Terence Crawford retires
"I spent my whole life chasing something."
Jonathan Gannon already thinking on Cardinals future
"I believe in myself and I believe in our team."
Phillip Rivers happy to be back, but laments loss
"This isn't about me."