Irish Daily Mail

Players can go year without test

- DUNCAN BECH

ENGLAND’S Rugby Football Union insists its anti-doping programme is robust, despite admitting that an Aviva Premiershi­p player can go an entire season without being tested. Figures for the 2016-17 season, published by the governing body yesterday, revealed that a total of 623 tests uncovered no violations within the profession­al game in England. However, it has emerged that while England stars are typically required to return samples eight to 12 times each campaign across club and internatio­nal duty, that figure drops to as low as zero for a Premiershi­p player. ‘Some would be tested three times a season, but some would go a season without being tested,’ the RFU’s antidoping manager Stephen Watkins said. ‘If a player did go a season without being tested, we’d flag it with UK Anti-Doping to make sure we pick those players up.’ The ongoing absence of positive tests in a sport where strength, speed, power and recovery are critical has raised eyebrows — the only violation ever recorded was the result of a contaminat­ed supplement in the 201011 season. Watkins, however, insists the present system is fit for purpose. ‘I speak to a lot of Premiershi­p players and the testing is a deterrent because they simply don’t know when the testers are coming in,’ Watkins said. ‘If a tester comes in and tests another player, then they are still seeing it. This is season on season. ‘Many of our players have played 10 years in the Premiershi­p so will have been tested many times. Since the 2004-05 season until the season that this report covers, over 7,000 tests have been done and not a single profession­al player has failed a drugs test for performanc­e enhancing drugs. ‘There are a huge number of intelligen­t tests — at home, at training, in matches, blood sampling. ‘We’ve used some of the most sophistica­ted anti-doping techniques available and we have not uncovered a single player. ‘What we can say is that there is no systemic problem.’

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