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Antonio Pettigrew was an American sprint athlete who specialized in the 400 meters. He was born in Macon, Georgia.
(November 3, 1967 – August 10, 2010)
While attending St. Augustine's College in Raleigh, North Carolina, he was a four-time NCAA Division II champion in the 400 meter race.[1] He came to prominence at the 1991 World Championships, where he won the 400 m gold medal and a silver medal in the 4 x 400 meters relay. He admitted to using performance-enhancing drugs between 1997 and 2001, and was stripped of his 1999 World Championship and 2000 Olympic relay gold medals.
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In 2008, prosecution documents related to the trial of coach Trevor Graham listed Pettigrew as one of Graham's athletes to have used performance-enhancing drugs.[2] Pettigrew then admitted to using performance-enhancing drugs and testified against Graham at his trial in May 2008.[3] Although IAAF rules currently do not retrospectively alter results more than eight years after the event, Pettigrew returned the medals he won in that period.[4][5] The 2000 Sydney Olympics 4 × 400 m relay US team was stripped of their medals after Pettigrew admitted that he had used performance-enhancing drugs.[6] He received a two-year athletics ban in 2008, although he had already retired from the track.[4] At the Summer Olympics in Sydney 2000, Pettigrew threw his gold medal winning Adidas spikes into the crowd after winning the 4 x 400m final for the USA.[7]Pettigrew was found dead in the backseat of his locked car in Chatham County, North Carolina, on August 10, 2010. The reasons of his death are yet unknown.[8] Evidence of sleeping pills were found by police. Suicide has not been ruled out as a possible cause of death.[1] Pettigrew was an assistant coach at the University of North Carolina at the time of his death.[9]
Personal bests
Event | Time (seconds) | Venue | Date |
---|---|---|---|
100 meters | 10.42 | Unknown | 1994 |
200 meters | 20.38 | Durham, North Carolina, United States | April 9, 1994 |
300 meters | 32.33 | Jerez de la Frontera, Spain | September 13, 1989 |
400 meters | 44.27 | Houston, Texas, United States | June 17, 1989 |
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