Weekend Herald

Club athlete cops illegal steroids ban

Two-year suspension for buying drug clenbutero­l off defunct website as trouble looms over other potential anti-doping violations

- Dylan Cleaver

Club cricketer Chris Ware has become the latest sportsman to receive a ban after he was caught buying illegal steroids off defunct website clenbutero­l.co.nz.

Ware purchased clenbutero­l from the website in 2014 and 2015, breaching anti-doping rules. His twoyear ban from the New Zealand Sports Tribunal has been backdated to January 1, 2017.

He is the fifth case to arise out of Medsafe’s investigat­ion into an online steroid supplier called NZ Clenbutero­l. Its owner, Joshua Townshend, was sentenced to two years’ jail after pleading guilty to 129 offences under the Medicines Act.

Medsafe passed their data to Drug Free Sport New Zealand (DFSNZ), who found more than 100 registered sportsmen and women across a range of sports and levels had potentiall­y committed anti-doping rules violations. It is expected around 80 will have cases heard by either the Sports Tribunal or Rugby Judiciary.

In submission­s, Ware, who now lives in the United Kingdom, said he used clenbutero­l to lose weight, not to enhance performanc­e.

Ware has never played first-class cricket, never been part of a highperfor­mance or drug education programme, nor been drug tested for sport. A left-arm bowler, Ware has played representa­tive cricket and last year signed to for Astley & Tyldesley CC in the Greater Manchester Cricket League.

The tribunal accepted Ware’s violation was not intentiona­l and therefore the presumptiv­e two-year period of ineligibil­ity applied. Ware accepted responsibi­lity for significan­t fault.

The tribunal also urged DFSNZ and national sports organisati­ons to initiate a “greater degree of drug education at all levels of competitiv­e sport”. This is in anticipati­on of the tribunal hearing many more similar cases over the coming months.

Sport New Zealand CEO Peter Miskimmin described the string of potential cases as “a massive wake-up call” for the country.

While the cases feature a range of sports, but it is understood that rugby players make up a significan­t portion — more than 40 per cent — of who now face potential sanctions.

The Rugby Judiciary banned Manawatu club player Adam Jowsey for two years in November 2016, but has yet to made a ruling on the next wave of cases. A spokeswoma­n for New Zealand Rugby said she was not expecting any decisions until the New Year.

No All Blacks or Olympians are among those caught in the sting, but it is understood some school-age athletes are.

 ??  ?? How we broke the doping scandal.
How we broke the doping scandal.

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