14 - The Michigan Daily - Monday, July 31, 2006 SPORT Tour winner Landis fac possible strip of victoi l MADRID (AP) - With his voice steady and his tone defiant, Floyd Landis vowed he would clear his name of allegations that he cheated o win the Tour de France. In his first public appearance since a testosterone imbalance showed up in a urinetest and cast his title into doubt, the American cyclist said his body's natural metabolism - not doping of any kind - caused the result, and that he would soon have the test results to prove it. "We will explain to the world why this is not a doping case but a natural 'ccurrence," Landis said Friday from the Spanish capital. Wearing a baseball cap turned back- ward and a white shirt with the name of his Phonak team, Landis lashed out at the media for characterizing his plight as a drug scandal and said he wanted to "make absolutely clear that I am not in any doping process." Later Friday, Landis's personal physi- cian sought to clarify the nature of the test result and the possible benefits of the hormone in question. "He does not have a high level of tes- tosterone. That's not been documented. He has a high ratio of testosterone to epitestosterone in his urine," Dr. Brent Kay said on CNN's "Larry King Live." Kay said the test could indicate ele- vated testosterone or low epitestoster- one, or some other factor - including handling or specimen contamination. Kay, speaking from Los Angeles, also said that using testosterone would hurt ., rather than help a cyclist. "I think everybody needs to take a step back and look at what we're talking about, because testosterone is a body- building steroid that builds mass," Kay said. "It builds mass over long-term use of weeks, months, and even years. "And it's crazy to think that a Tour de France professional cyclist would be using testosterone, particularly in the middle of a race. It's a joke. Every sports medicine expert, physician, trainer, sci- entist that I've talked to in the last day, have really the same opinion, 'No way. This is a joke.'" Landis, a native of Lancaster Coun- ty, Pennsylvania, said he was shocked when told of the initial result. He said he had been tested six other times dur- ing the tour, and many other times dur- ing the year. The aggressive tack Landis and his supporters took Friday was a departure from his Thursday teleconference, when he said he expected to clear his name but not his reputation, and had no idea what might have caused the test result See LANDIS, Page 16 M Speedster Justin Gatlin the latest to test positive (AP) - Another American champion was hit with a shock- ing positive drug test Saturday - Olympic and world 100- meter titlist Justin Gatlin. Gatlin said he has been informed that he tested positive for testosterone or other prohibited steroids - the same violation that only two days ago threw Floyd Landis's victory in the Tour de France into question. Gatlin, who positioned himself as a leader in trying to prove track and field is a clean sport,said in a statement released through his publicist that the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency informed him of the test taken after a relay race in Kansas in April. He said he will cooperate with USADA "and hope that when all the facts are revealed it will be determined that I have done nothing wrong" If found guilty, he could face a lifetime ban from track and field. "I cannot account for these results, because I have never knowingly used any banned substance or authorized anyone else to administer such a substance to me," Gatlin said. "In the course of my entire professional career, I have been tested more than 100 times. ... All of the tests this season, including the out-of-competition and in-competition tests conducted just before and after the race in Kansas, were negative." Gatlin, who in May tied Jamaica's Asafa Powell for the world record in the 100 at 9.77 seconds, would lose the record if the result is upheld. The 2004 Olympic champion is coached by Trevor Graham, whose former pupils include Tim Montgomery and Marion Jones, both of whom have both been prominently mentioned in the BALCO steroids investigation. Several athletes coached by Graham have been suspended or banned for doping. In an interview on WRAL-TV in North Carolina, Graham said Gatlin doesn't accept supplements from anyone. "He's got his own nutritional supplements that he goes out and buys," Graham said. "He will not trust anyone to take any- thing from him, not his parents, his coach, not anyone." Gatlin's revelation came just days after Landis tested posi-1 tive for a testosterone imbalance after his stirring comeback See GATLIN, Page 16 At1 Point guard Jerret Smith hopes that playing in Australia will give him momentum going into next season. TOUR Continued from page 13 and-down freshman season. He began the season with an impres- sive performance against Central Michigan, playing a true point guard role and dishing out nine assists. But troubles with his shooting and defense plagued the Romulus native, and playing time during the Big Ten Foreign Tour could help prepare him for his possible starting role at point guard next year for Michigan. This year's tour will take place in Australia. Past tours have been set in countries such as Spain, Japan, France, Italy, Finland, Belgium, the Netherlands, Germany, Austria, England and Ireland. Other notable players joining Amaker's squad are Michigan State guard Travis Walton, Ohio State guard Ron Lewis, Indiana guard Roderick Wilmont and Illinois for- ward Marcus Arnold. Wisconsin will not have a rep- resentative this year, leaving the team's roster at 11 players. I a 6 &r HOT BODY ANN ARBOR Contest for men and women ages 18-30. Will make appearances at local bars and clubs. Please send full body shot to A2hotbody@gmail.com Winners will be selected by August Ist WWW.C LEA NWAT ER B EACH. CO M L ocated: Fxit 22 off US 23, 4 milPs south of Milan. 5 miles north of Dundee (Cabella's). 15 miles s uth of Ann Arbor