Laila Traby

Laila Traby
Personal information
Born (1979-03-26) March 26, 1979
Sport
Country  France
Sport Athletics
Event(s) Running

Laila Traby (born 26 March 1979) is a French runner. She won a bronze medal at the 2014 European Championships in Zürich in the 10,000 metres event.[1] Three months after the championship, she was found by police with EPO in her apartment while training in the Pyrenees. She subsequently underwent a doping test.[2]

Laila Traby began her athletic career at the Institute of Sports at Rabat. [3] She said her Sahrawi origins had not allowed her to progress in her birth country. [4] She accused the Moroccan Federation of athletics of depriving her of a selection to the Pan Arab Games in 2004 by adding a second to her qualifying time. She emigrated to France, undocumented, in 2005 and was naturalized in 2013.[4]

His career really began in 2013, when she won a team silver medal at the 2013 European Cross Country Championships.

Within a year, she surprised everyone by improving nearly three minutes his record over 10 km, from 34 min 36 sec to 31 min 56 s. .[5]

In 2014, she won the title of champion of France in the 5000 m. A month later, at the European Athletic Championships, she won the bronze medal in the 10 000 m.

On 7 November, the police raided the apartment occupied by Laila Traby she lived in during an internship in Font-Romeu, a place of high altitude training for French distance runners. Several EPO ampoules and syringes were left in a refrigerator. According to Le Monde, the athlete would not say she was Laila Traby, before starting to speak in Arabic only, and refusing sign any papers. This led the police to the place Traby in custody.[6] A blood test confirmed the presence of EPO in her body [7] The athlete says she was a "victim of a conspiracy," since EPO can not be administered by injection intraveneously. .[8]

On May 18, 2015, she was suspended three years by the French Agency for doping.[9]

Personal Bests[10]

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/8/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.