a After the announcement of the disqualification for doping of the athlete Yuri Bilonog (UKR), who won the gold medal at the time, there was a new distribution of medals in March 2013. The IOC upgraded original silver medalist Adam Nelson (USA) to gold, bronze medalist Joachim Olsen (DEN) to silver, and fourth place finisher Manuel Martínez (ESP) to bronze.[1][2] bAdrian Annus (HUN) and Ivan Tsikhan (BLR) were disqualified due to doping.[1] IOC decided to declare the silver and bronze medals vacant.[3] cCrystal Cox (USA), who ran in the preliminary round of a relay team, admitted to using anabolic steroids from 2001 to 2004. The IOC decided to revoke the gold medal from Crystal Cox and asked the IAAF to make its decision about the US squad. The IOC and IAAF announced that the result would stand due to the fact that, according to the rules of the time, a team should not be disqualified because of a doping offense by an athlete who did not compete in finals.[4][5] dRussian athlete Irina Korzhanenko lost her gold medal in women's shot put due to doping, with CubanYumileidi Cumbá Jay replacing her as the Olympic champion, GermanNadine Kleinert receiving the silver medal, and Svetlana Krivelyova of Russia receiving the bronze medal,[6] however Krivelyova was later stripped of her bronze for the same reason. IOC decided to declare the bronze medal vacant.[7] eIryna Yatchenko (BLR), was disqualified due to doping. The IOC decided that the bronze medal was reallocated to the athlete Věra Pospíšilová-Cechlová (CZE) during the IOC Executive Board on 30 May 2013.[1][2]