Ex-Soviet track coach pleads guilty in BALCO case
Posted on: Friday, 29 July 2005, 15:31 CDT
By Adam Tanner
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - A Soviet-born track coach admitted on Friday to distributing performance-enhancing drugs to athletes, becoming the last of four men to plead guilty in the BALCO steroid scandal that has shaken the world of sport.
Remi Korchemny, 73, admitted in U.S. federal court that he had wrongly dispensed the prescription drug modafinil to an athlete on July 4, 2002.
Korchemny pleaded guilty to one count but spoke of a wider distribution.
"Steroids and stimulants, according to the names on the boxes, I passed them on to athletes," Korchemny told U.S. District Court Judge Susan Illston.
Korchemny said the substances had come from BALCO founder Victor Conte. Under a plea agreement, Korchemny will not serve any time in prison for the misdemeanor.
Earlier this month, Conte and his deputy, as well as Greg Anderson, personal trainer to baseball slugger Barry Bonds, reached plea deals with prosecutors that will likely result in short prison terms for Conte and Anderson.
In a series of court appearances since the indictments early last year, Korchemny has appeared the most ill at ease of the four men, giving little hint of his demanding and confident competitive spirit.
FANATICAL COACHING
"Everyone I work with becomes fanatical and wants to get better," Korchemny told Reuters in 2003 before his indictment. "If they don't want to get fanatical, my philosophy is not getting through."
Korchemny has guided many top athletes from Soviet sprinter Valeri Borzov, who won two gold medals in the 1972 Olympics in Munich, to Britain's Dwain Chambers, who was victorious in 100 meters 30 years later at the European championships.
Since the BALCO scandal became public in 2003, a number of Korchemny's proteges have been banned from sport, including Chambers and U.S. sprinter Kelli White.
In addition, the Court of Arbitration for Sport is now considering a lifetime ban for Chryste Gaines, the 1996 Olympic 4x100 meters relay gold medallist.
Born in Odessa, Ukraine, Korchemny's father was killed in a Stalinist purge, and he lived briefly in an orphanage.
From his hardscrabble youth, he turned to sport and became a sprinter in the Soviet Army. He later turned to coaching but emigrated to the United States when the detente era opened the way for more Jews to leave the Soviet Union.
Before his indictment, Korchemny downplayed the impact his association with BALCO would have on his legacy.
"As far as reputation, that's the concern of a trainer who is earning a salary and who's interested in achieving something. I've already achieved what I need to achieve," he said.
Judge Illston is scheduled to issue her sentences in the four BALCO cases on October 18.
Source: REUTERS
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