The New Zealand Herald

‘Careless’ Parker is not doper

Duco: Champ missed test while on holiday

-

A“careless” Joseph Parker has missed a World Boxing Council drugs test but his team deny he has taken any banned substances. The organisati­on listed Parker among five boxers as having missed tests in their “Mid-year Clean Boxing Programme Testing Report”.

The Voluntary Anti-Doping Associatio­n ( Vada) runs the WBC’s testing programme.

They have conducted tests on 73 fighters in 2017, with 64 returning clean results and four — Andrej Wawrzyk, Cletus Seldin, Dennys Ceylan and Suriyan Khaikanha — delivering what were described as “adverse findings”. Some boxers were tested multiple times.

In a statement, Parker’s promoters Duco Events confirmed the news but said their charge had been “careless” rather than “doping”.

“Joseph extended his holiday following the [Razvan] Cojanu bout on May 6 and didn’t update the Vada system of his change of plans,” Duco said.

“A couple of weeks ago drug testers went to his residence in Las Vegas. He said he was going to be in camp there, but he had changed his plans and was in Samoa.”

Parker, the WBO heavyweigh­t champion, is set to defend his belt against unbeaten Englishman Hughie Fury in Manchester on September 23.

Duco said Parker had to “take it on the chin”.

“There is no hiding, it’s an oversight. A missed test doesn’t mean you’ve been doping, it just means you’ve been careless. Joseph is back in camp in Vegas for the next eight weeks and Vada can stop by at any time of the day or night if they want to see him.”

Vada’s testing process involves athletes informing the organisati­on where they are going to be for one hour per day, from 6am-11pm, every day of the year. The procedure is similar to the Whereabout­s programme operated by the World Anti-Doping Agency, which oversees most internatio­nal sporting codes.

Any athlete who misses two or more Vada tests during their period of registrati­on with the organisati­on will be removed from the programme “at Vada’s discretion”.

Athletes must be at a precise location specified on the “Whereabout­s Form” for the entire 60-minute period and provide sufficient informatio­n to enable a tester to find and gain access to the location to find the athlete.

Essentiall­y, all Parker had to do was send an email informing Vada of the changes.

Vada policy states: “Immediatel­y on learning any informatio­n in a previously provided Vada Whereabout­s Form is incomplete, inaccurate, or has changed in any manner, the athlete must communicat­e such changed informatio­n to Vada by completing and filing a new Whereabout­s Form — either a hard copy or an electronic submission.”

Vada claims a Wada-approved laboratory conducts the tests and an internatio­nally-recognised anti-doping group collects the specimens and maintains the chain of custody.

 ?? Picture / Photosport ?? WBO heavyweigh­t champion Joseph Parker will have to cop his mistake on the chin after missing a drugs test while on an extended holiday.
Picture / Photosport WBO heavyweigh­t champion Joseph Parker will have to cop his mistake on the chin after missing a drugs test while on an extended holiday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand