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Alysha Newman, Canada’s 2024 Olympic bronze medallist in the women’s pole vault, has been provisionally suspended by the Athletics Integrity Unit (AIU) for whereabouts failures after reportedly missing three anti‑doping tests within a 12‑month period.
Under the rules, three missed tests can trigger a sanction ranging from 12 months to two years; the AIU has not published the dates of the missed tests.
Newman, 31, set a Canadian record of 4.85m to win bronze in Paris and has not competed since May 2025.
Athletics Canada acknowledged the provisional suspension and reiterated that athletes bear responsibility for filing accurate location information, saying it hopes Newman will return to the national programme when eligible.
The AIU will hold a hearing to make a final determination.
Newman has also drawn public attention for supplementing her income through modelling and an OnlyFans account, a factor cited in some coverage but not related to the anti‑doping case itself.
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The comments underscore that whereabouts rules are precise and operationally strict: small scheduling changes or late updates can produce filing failures that accumulate into provisional suspensions. Procedural details — daily 60‑minute windows and agents’ waiting/call routines — explain how administrative lapses, not necessarily doping, precipitate sanctions.




















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