Former London Marathon winner protests his innocence as Athletics Integrity Unit announces athlete biological passport case
Kenya’s Daniel Wanjiru, who won the 2017 Virgin Money London Marathon, has been provisionally suspended by the Athletics Integrity Unit (AIU).
Announcing the suspension on Twitter, the AIU wrote: “The AIU has provisionally suspended marathon specialist Daniel Kinyua Wanjiru of Kenya with immediate effect for an Athlete Biological Passport violation under the @worldathletics Anti-Doping Rules.”
The AIU has provisionally suspended marathon specialist Daniel Kinyua Wanjiru of Kenya with immediate effect for an Athlete Biological Passport violation under the @worldathletics Anti-Doping Rules.
Find out more ⬇️https://t.co/opInfkVlnV #AIUNews#CleanSport pic.twitter.com/4DEGT6w896— Athletics Integrity Unit (@aiu_athletics) April 14, 2020
With the charge having been issued, Wanjiru will now wait for his case to be heard.
The 27-year-old, who beat Ethiopia’s Kenenisa Bekele to the 2017 London Marathon title, has a marathon PB of 2:05:21, set when winning the Amsterdam Marathon in 2016.
In a statement released by his management company Volare Sports, Wanjiru protested his innocence, adding that he has “never used doping”.
Wanjiru is also quoted as saying: “This statement comes from the heart. I am clean in the sports I do. The ABP (athlete biological passport) finding is confusing and frustrating me. Specialists have informed me about how this can happen and I have come to realise there can be hundreds of reasons found why HB is fluctuating.
“I feel I am already seen as a sinner of doping, but I am not. I am innocent.
“It’s very painful what’s happening to me now. I’ve always believed that those athletes who are suspended because of a doping violation, were indeed guilty of what they did. But I’ve realised that being charged of guilt is just easy and now proving being unguilty is hard.
“I stand for clean sports. My results of the past came through hard work only. I have never used doping. We are currently investigating the case. Knowing I have never used anything, I have faith everything will be all right.”