Daily Dispatch

Doping police act quickly to snare the drug cheats

Intelligen­ce-led drive a success, says official

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AN “intelligen­ce-led” doping probe prevented three Australian­s and an undisclose­d number of other athletes from competing at the Commonweal­th Games but no positive tests have been recorded on the Gold Coast to date.

Australian Sports Anti-Doping Authority (Asada) chief David Sharpe said a preventati­ve task force funded to the tune of millions of dollars by the Australian government had conducted tests on 2 600 local athletes and 500 from overseas.

Sharpe said he was not able to name the three Australian athletes caught cheating by the task-force and said the number of athletes from other countries was “less than 20”. “We’ve seen the scandals over the last 18 months, which is why it was important that we delivered a programme that removes cheats before they arrived at the Games,” said Sharpe.

Organisers would not disclose the number of tests that were being conducted on the 6 000 athletes at the Games but Sharpe did confirm that there had been no adverse analytical findings.

The Commonweal­th Games Federation (CGF) will follow the lead of the Olympics movement by retaining samples for future testing for the first time in the Gold Coast, said Dr Mani Jegathesan of the Commonweal­th Games Medical Commission.

Sharpe, a former policeman, said the intelligen­ce-led approach was a far more efficient way of combating cheating than blanket testing.

“For mine, if we do less tests that are better intelligen­ce-led, we get better results,” he added.

Botswanan former world champion Amantle Montsho, who served a two-year ban after failing a doping test at the 2014 Commonweal­th Games, won gold in the women’s 400m in the athletics on Wednesday night.

CGF chief David Grevemberg said that despite the encouragin­g results, there was no room for complacenc­y in the battle against doping.

“This is not a quick-fix, this is the most robust that we have been in preparatio­n for a Games but we need now to continue that fight outside Games’ time,” he said.

“Whether that is creating more deterrents or taking more preventati­ve measures to ultimately alter behaviour and let cheats know there is no place for them at the Commonweal­th Games.

“We’re absolutely committed to playing a larger role as this continues to move forward.” —

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