From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- The native form of this personal name is Annus
Adrián. This article uses the Western name order.
Adrián Annus (born June 28, 1973 in Szeged) is a Hungarian hammer thrower who was stripped of his gold
medal at the 2004 Summer Olympic Games in
Athens for a doping violation in a highly publicized scandal. The
disqualification received heightened attention as it came on the
heels of several drug scandals at the Athens Games and came as Annus' teammate, discus thrower Róbert
Fazekas was also stripped of his Olympic title for a drug
violation. The incident also received attention as Annus refused
for several months to return his gold medal, relenting only after
the International Olympic
Committee put pressure on the Hungarian Olympic Committee and
threatened sanctions.
Career
He grew up in Gyula and moved to Szombathely in 1989.
His first coach was Géza Annus but joined Haladás VSE, the
Szombathely sports club after his move. At Haladás, Gyula Simon
coached him before Pál Németh took over. His first significant
result came in 1992, when he finished eleventh at in the discus
throw at the World Junior Championship in Seoul.
In 1998, he finished eighth in the hammer at the European
Championships in Budapest. This strong showing made Annus a
potential contender for a medal at the 2000
Summer Olympic Games but he was initially left out of the team
due to stiff competition for a spot on the team. He eventually
received a spot on the team due to an injury but was not in top
form to be a real contender and finished seventeenth.
Following the 2000 Olympics, he broke with his coach, Pál
Németh, and joined József Vida.
2002 and 2003 were among his best years. In 2002 he won the
European Championship and in 2003 he took silver at the World
Championship. He also won the 2003 World Athletic Final.
Drug
Scandal
In 2004, he was favored to win in Athens but was stripped of his
medal just a few days after winning, losing the gold medal to Koji Murofushi.
The International Olympic Committee concluded that his urine
samples—taken before and after competition—showed evidence of
belonging to different people, therefore indicating tampering.[1]. The
IOC also attempted to test Annus shortly after his competition in
Athens but Annus refused the test, which by itself warranted his
disqualification.
The IOC never officially concluded how it was possible for Annus
to provide samples that belonged to different people but track and
field insiders said he likely used a device which included a
container for urine and a fake penis and emptied the container into
the testing bottle when required to provide a sample.
Following a rejected appeal and a hearing by the Court of
Arbitration for Sport, Annus was banned for two years. Following
the ban, Annus began training and started competing in 2007.
See also
Results
- 1996: Atlanta, Olympic
Games, 28th
- 1998: Budapest, European Championships 8th
- 2000: Sydney, Olympic
Games 17th
- 2001: Edmonton, World
Championships 9th
- 2001: Beijing, Summer Universiade, 3rd
- 2002: Münich, European Champions, 1st
- 2002: Madrid, World Cup, 1st
- 2002: Paris, Grand Prix, 2nd
- 2003: Szombathely, Hungary, MAL Cup, 84 meter 19 cm -
Hungarian record
- 2003: Paris, World
Championships, 2nd
- 2003: Szombathely (Hungary), World Athletics Final,
1st
Notes
- ^
http://www.olympic.org/common/asp/download_report.asp?file=en_report_919.pdf&id=919
External
links