Jamaica Gleaner

Pogba facing tough fight against four-year ban

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THE FOUR-YEAR ban imposed on Paul Pogba – a 2018 World Cup winner with France and once the most expensive player in football history – is in a doping case that could end his career. The ban has shocked world football.

It was also entirely in line with bans in similar recent cases in football, including two cases prosecuted by FIFA from qualifying games for the 2022 World Cup and a UEFA case detailed yesterday by the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport.

Top-ranked athletes in other sports, including Grand Slam tennis champion Simona Halep. and Russian figure-skater Kamila Valieva, also have their careers on hold while their lawyers challenge four-year bans in doping cases.

Four years has been routine since 2015 when the world antidoping code was updated. Since then, the code also lets bans be reduced or overturned if athletes can show they were not at fault or negligent for a positive test, or were contaminat­ed.

“The feedback at that time, including among many athletes, was that a more robust default sanction was needed,” the World Anti-Doping Agency said on yesterday in a statement.

Pogba will be the latest case going to appeal at CAS, to challenge his ban imposed on Thursday by an Italian sports tribunal for a positive test for DHEA, a steroid precursor.

Yesterday the court in Lausanne, Switzerlan­d, published a detailed ruling in the doping case of an internatio­nal footballer that helps show the narrow path to a reduced ban.

A four-year ban was imposed by UEFA on Bulgaria winger Georgi Yomov, who tested positive for an anabolic steroid at a Europa Conference League game in July 2022 when aged 25.

EVIDENCE NOTED

Yomov’s argument was to blame his brother, who was said to have crushed steroid pills into smoothies made in a blender they both used at their parents’ home. With no proof to back the theory, and other inconsiste­ncies in evidence noted by the CAS judges, the appeal failed.

The three judges were split 2-1 and noted a four-year ban for Yomov “may be said to be harsh”, the 33-page court ruling said.

“That said, the majority of the panel is bound to apply the rules, of which the player was aware, as they are set out,” the CAS judges said. “There is no scope to act otherwise.”

In a different football doping case at CAS, judges were swayed by parts of a player’s argument of contaminat­ion by an anabolic steroid and cut his UEFA ban to two years.

Dinamo Zagreb player Arijan Ademi tested positive after a Champions League win over Arsenal and was able to persuade judges he had no intent to dope. Ademi could show he checked with team doctors about the supplement he used.

Few details of Pogba’s case have been confirmed officially and the Italian tribunal judges could take another month to give him their detailed reasons.

“When I am free of legal restrictio­ns the full story will become clear, but I have never knowingly or deliberate­ly taken any supplement­s that violate antidoping regulation­s,” the France midfielder wrote on Thursday on his Instagram account.

Pogba turns 31 on March 15 and his appeal to CAS could take at least several months to be heard and longer to reach a verdict.

The timeline of Halep’s case has frustrated the former No. 1-ranked player, who was at CAS February 7-9 for an appeal hearing to challenge her ban for a positive test at the 2022 US Open. The 32-year-old Romanian has blamed a contaminat­ed supplement.

 ?? FILE ?? Paul Pogba
FILE Paul Pogba

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