DOPING/SWIMMING-KOVACS
NOVEMBER 9 2007 11:28h
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The 1996 Olympic 200 metre breaststroke champion and seven-times European champion on Friday denied breaking any rules.
The 1996 Olympic 200 metre breaststroke champion and seven-times European champion on Friday denied breaking any rules and said doping officials had misled her, saying she was free to go after she had been unable to immediately produce a sufficient sample.
Kovacs had been selected for a urine test on Oct. 30 and only produced 25 millilitres of urine, a third of the required amount, before she said she had to urgently leave for a meeting.
"The athlete, claiming other duties, refused to provide a further sample and acknowledged her refusal in writing," the Hungarian Anti-Doping Group, the firm in charge of testing, said in a statement.
Kovacs said she had to leave for a prescheduled event and claimed anti-doping officials had said it was all right for her to go.
"They gave me lots of papers to sign and on top of one paper it said 'refusal to take a doping test', but (the testers) said 'no, this is not a violation, it's not a problem, you can go'," Kovacs said on public television MTV on Friday.
Kovacs said doping officials had not offered to accompany her and wait for a sample, and that they had told her they would come back in several days for a new sample.
"I have been misled," Kovacs said.



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