Kenyan runner Rhonex Kipruto barred 6 years for irregularities in athlete passport

Kenyan runner Rhonex Kipruto has been stripped of his world record in men's 10-kilometre road racing and banned six years in a doping case.

Stripped of 2020 road race world record and 2019 world bronze medal

A Kenyan male runner, dressed in a brown, red and green singlet competes in the 10,000-metre race at the Olympic Stadium in Tokyo during the Olympics on July 30, 2021.
In suspending Kenya's Rhonex Kipruto for six years, a disciplinary panel in Monaco ruled abnormalities in the runner's blood samples pointed to "a deliberate and sophisticated doping regime" and Kipruto likely had help from unknown third parties. (Christian Petersen/Getty Images/File)

Kenyan runner Rhonex Kipruto has been stripped of his world record in men's 10-kilometre road racing and banned six years in a doping case.

A disciplinary panel in Monaco ruled abnormalities in Kipruto's blood samples pointed to "a deliberate and sophisticated doping regime" and Kipruto likely had help from unknown third parties. At the time, he was aiming to qualify for the last Summer Olympics in Tokyo.

The panel imposed a six-year ban because of what it deemed the "aggravating circumstances" in the case, up from a standard four-year doping ban.

Kipruto was disqualified from all his results since September 2018, meaning he loses a world championship bronze medal in the 10,000 metres from 2019 and his 10K road record from 2020.

That record is set to pass to Ethiopian runner Berihu Aregawi. He ran 26 minutes 33 seconds in the 10K last year, nine seconds slower than Kipruto.

No banned substance was found in Kipruto's system and the case rested on data from his biological passport, which tracks athletes' blood samples over time to detect irregularities and changes that point to blood doping.

The panel said Kipruto's defence sought to blame illnesses, irregular training habits and his alcohol use, which it said had increased during the COVID-19 pandemic. Kipruto also sought to dispute the validity of some blood samples in the case.

A statement on Kipruto's website dated Tuesday and attributed to unnamed legal counsel indicated he is considering an appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport. "Despite exhaustive efforts to present comprehensive medical evidence and expert testimonies, the ruling failed to consider crucial aspects of Rhonex's health and circumstances," the statement said.

It is the latest in a long series of doping cases involving Kenyan distance runners.

Fellow Kenyan runner Rodgers Kwemoi, who placed fourth behind Kipruto in the world championship 10,000 in 2019, was banned six years last month in a similar case based around blood sample data.

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