The New Zealand Herald

Kiwi Dawson hit with second doping ban

-

Canterbury Rams basketball­er Gareth Dawson has been banned for four years on doping charges.

It is Dawson's second anti-doping rule violation, having been suspended for 12 months in 2014.

A Sports Tribunal ruling said Dawson had a prohibited substance, higenamine, in a sample taken from him at a National Basketball League game in May this year.

The substance came from the supplement Oxyshred, a thermogeni­c fat burner product used by Dawson.

He was provisiona­lly suspended on September 4, this year.

The tribunal said it had significan­t difficulti­es contacting Dawson who lives in Western Australia. On October 18 he formally admitted the violation and asked to be heard but failed to attend a hearing.

The tribunal cautioned Dawson that he was subject to substantia­l mandatory penalties, offering assistance and advice. Despite numerous efforts to engage Dawson, he did not take any action to mitigate the consequenc­es and declined to attend a reschedule­d hearing.

“He said he had outlined his circumstan­ces and was satisfied for the matter to be dealt with in his absence,” the tribunal said.

The presumptiv­e period of ineligibil­ity for the unintentio­nal presence of a specified substance (such as higenamine) is two years. For a second anti-doping rule violation, Dawson was subject to “twice the period of ineligibil­ity” otherwise applicable which is four years.

“Dawson exercised no caution, given the high risk associated with supplement­s to ensure compliance with sports anti-doping rules.

“Mr Dawson, as an experience­d athlete with a previous anti-doping suspension, understood the high standards expected and the strict anti-doping obligation­s under the code.

“In the circumstan­ces, the tribunal was unable to consider any eliminatio­n or reduction in the period of ineligibil­ity.”

The four-year disqualifi­cation was backdated to July 31, 2017.

Drug Free Sport New Zealand chief executive Nick Paterson said athletes could not afford to be complacent when using supplement­s.

“We can't reiterate enough how important it is for athletes to check and double check every supplement which they are thinking of taking. Manufactur­ers do not always list all ingredient­s on the label.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand