Current:Home > MyRunner banned for 12 months after she admitted to using a car to finish ultramarathon -TrueNorth Finance Path
Runner banned for 12 months after she admitted to using a car to finish ultramarathon
View
Date:2025-04-14 15:11:47
A Scottish ultramarathon runner has been banned for 12 months from competitive events after a disciplinary panel in the United Kingdom brought down a punitive decision in response to her cheating during a race earlier this year.
Joasia Zakrzewski admitted to using a car to gain mileage while running the 2023 GB Ultras Manchester to Liverpool race — a 50-mile-long ultramarathon that took place last April. Zakrzewski — who finished third — accepted a medal and a trophy from the marathon organizers, but eventually returned both and admitted after the fact to competing with an unfair edge, according to a written decision by the Independent Disciplinary Panel of UK Athletics in October.
"The claimant had collected the trophy at the end of the race, something which she should have not done if she was completing the race on a non-competitive basis," said the disciplinary panel, which noted that Zakrzewski "also did not seek to return the trophy in the week following the race."
By September, Zakrzewski had relinquished both prizes and admitted in a letter to the disciplinary panel that she completed part of the ultramarathon course by car and the rest on foot before accepting the third-place medal and trophy.
"As stated, I accept my actions on the day that I did travel in a car and then later completed the run, crossing the finish line and inappropriately receiving a medal and trophy, which I did not return immediately as I should have done," she wrote in the letter, according to the panel.
A 47-year-old general practitioner originally from Dumfries, Scotland, Zakrzewski currently lives near Sydney, Australia, and traveled from there to participate in the race from Manchester to Liverpool in the spring, BBC News reported.
Zakrzewski has previously said she got into a car that her friend was driving around the 25-mile mark in April's ultramarathon, because she had gotten lost and her leg felt sore. The friend apparently drove Zakrzewski about 2 1/2 miles to the next race checkpoint, where she tried to tell officials that she was going to quit the ultramarathon. But she went on to complete the race anyway from that checkpoint.
"When I got to the checkpoint I told them I was pulling out and that I had been in the car, and they said 'you will hate yourself if you stop,'" Zakrzewski told BBC News Scotland in the weeks following the ultramarathon. By then, she had admitted to using a car to participate and had been disqualified.
Zakrzewski claimed she did not breach the U.K. code of conduct for senior athletes because she "never intended to cheat, and had not concealed the fact that she had travelled in a car," wrote the disciplinary panel, which disagreed with those claims.
"Even if she was suffering from brain fog on the day of the race, she had a week following the race to realise her actions and return the trophy, which she did not do," the panel wrote in its decision. "Finally, she posted about the race on social media, and this did not disclose that she had completed the race on a non-competitive basis."
In addition to being banned from participating in competitive events for a year in the U.K., the disciplinary panel has also prohibited Zakrzewski from representing Great Britain in domestic and overseas events for the same period of time.
- In:
- Sports
- Australia
- United Kingdom
Emily Mae Czachor is a reporter and news editor at CBSNews.com. She covers breaking news, often focusing on crime and extreme weather. Emily Mae has previously written for outlets including the Los Angeles Times, BuzzFeed and Newsweek.
Twitter InstagramveryGood! (364)
Related
- What to watch: O Jolie night
- New Study Reveals Arctic Ice, Tracked Both Above and Below, Is Freezing Later
- Why Khloe Kardashian Forgives Tristan Thompson for Multiple Cheating Scandals
- New Study Reveals Arctic Ice, Tracked Both Above and Below, Is Freezing Later
- Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
- Why Travis King, the U.S. soldier who crossed into North Korea, may prove to be a nuisance for Kim Jong Un's regime
- ‘Advanced’ Recycling of Plastic Using High Heat and Chemicals Is Costly and Environmentally Problematic, A New Government Study Finds
- Once Hailed as a Solution to the Global Plastics Scourge, PureCycle May Be Teetering
- Intellectuals vs. The Internet
- Annoyed With Your Internet Connection? This Top-Rated Wi-Fi Extender Is on Sale for $18 on Prime Day 2023
Ranking
- See you latte: Starbucks plans to cut 30% of its menu
- OutDaughtered’s Danielle and Adam Busby Detail Her Alarming Battle With Autoimmune Disease
- New Wind and Solar Are Cheaper Than the Costs to Operate All But One Coal-Fired Power Plant in the United States
- As Enforcement Falls Short, Many Worry That Companies Are Flouting New Mexico’s Landmark Gas Flaring Rules
- Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
- In Dimock, a Pennsylvania Town Riven by Fracking, Concerns About Ties Between a Judge and a Gas Driller
- The Best Portable Grill Deals from Amazon Prime Day 2023: Coleman, Cuisinart, and Ninja Starting at $20
- Outrage over man who desecrated Quran prompts protesters to set Swedish Embassy in Iraq on fire
Recommendation
A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
Navigator’s Proposed Carbon Pipeline Struggles to Gain Support in Illinois
Striking actors and studios fight over control of performers' digital replicas
Educator, Environmentalist, Union Leader, Senator, Paul Pinsky Now Gets to Turn His Climate Ideals Into Action
The Grammy nominee you need to hear: Esperanza Spalding
Pennsylvania Advocates Issue Intent to Sue Shell’s New Petrochemical Plant Outside Pittsburgh for Emissions Violations
In Northern Virginia, a Coming Data Center Boom Sounds a Community Alarm
Jamie Foxx addresses hospitalization for the first time: I went to hell and back