Chinese doping officials deny covering up Sun Yang’s positive test

China Anti-Doping Agency held back news three-month suspension

China’s Sun Yang after winning the men’s 400m freestyle final at the London 2012 Olympic Games. He secretly served his ban during May and August. Photograph: Inpho
China’s Sun Yang after winning the men’s 400m freestyle final at the London 2012 Olympic Games. He secretly served his ban during May and August. Photograph: Inpho

Chinese doping officials say they were not trying to cover up Sun Yang’s positive test and that they held back news of his three-month suspension because they did not want to make any mistakes with “the most famous athlete in China”.

Sun, China's most successful male swimmer, secretly served his ban during May and August after testing positive for the banned stimulant trimetazidine. It was only on Monday that the China Anti-Doping Agency (Chinada) revealed the 22-year-old world and Olympic champion had committed a doping offence.

"Sun is the most famous athlete in China and is known in the world, which means we need to handle his case very cautiously," Chinada deputy director Zhao Jian told the country's official Xinhua news agency.

“This is huge bad news but we will not cover it up. “We announce positive cases and test statistics in our quarterly reports just as WADA (World Anti-Doping Agency) requires.”

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Chinada said Sun had been given a three-month penalty because he had been taking trimetazidine for years to treat an existing heart problem and was unaware that the stimulant had only been added be Wada’s banned list in January. But the case is certain to arouse fresh suspicions about China’e re-emergence as a global force in swimming after a series of drug busts in the 1990s and the turn of the century.