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Winter Olympics: Pyeongchang Games sees first confirmed doping case

Japan's Kei Saito trains during Short Track Speed Skating practice ahead of PyeongChang 2018 Winter Olympics
Image: Japanese speedskater Kei Saito has been sent home

Japanese short-track speedskater Kei Saito has tested positive for a banned diuretic in the first doping case of the Winter Olympics.

Saito, a reserve on the 5,000m relay team, tested positive for acetazolamide, which can be used to treat conditions such as glaucoma and altitude sickness but can also be a masking agent to disguise the use of other banned substances.

The Court of Arbitration for Sport announced the case Tuesday, saying Saito "accepted on a voluntary basis to be provisionally suspended and to leave the Olympic Village."

Saito did not race in any event before the test result from a pre-competition sample was confirmed. CAS said its judging panel handling Olympic doping cases will issue a final verdict after the games are over.

The Japanese Olympic Committee said Saito was tested after training on Feb 4, just before he went to bed in the athletes' village.

In a statement, Saito denied intentionally doping and said he was "extremely shocked" by the results.

"I have never considered doping. I have never used anabolic steroids so I have never needed to try to hide it," he said in the statement.

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He said he accepted the provisional suspension because "I do not want to be a disturbance to my teammates competing at the Olympic Games ... and will leave the team and the athletes' village voluntarily."

Yasuo Saito, vice president of the Japan Olympic Committee, said the JOC would work to help the 21-year-old skater clear his name after the Olympics.

He added: "Saito has no idea why this has happened, so we as Japanese Olympic team continue to make every effort to prove that there was no anti-rule violation by Kei Saito."

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