The Independent on Saturday

Drug cloud over Chiliboy

- MIKE GREENAWAY mike.greenaway@inl.co.za

SHARKS and former Springbok hooker Chiliboy Ralepelle, pictured, earlier this week denied he had tested positive for a banned substance, but yesterday South African Institute for Drug Free Sport (Saids) officials said it was likely the case.

If the suspicion turns out to be true, it will be the second time that Ralepelle has failed a test for the anabolic steroid drostanolo­ne, which is on the World Anti-Doping Agency’s list of banned substances.

In 2015, in France, he was banned from sport for two years after failing an out-of-competitio­n doping test taken the year before, when he was recovering from an operation on a knee injury he had sustained while playing for Toulouse against Biarritz.

Speculatio­n has grown over the past few weeks that something has been amiss with the 32-year-old because of his complete absence from the Shark Tank.

He has been nursing a knee injury but has been nowhere to be seen.

On January 17, Saids officials attended a Sharks training session and the players were all tested. When it was rumoured that Ralepelle’s absence lately was because of a failed test, Sharks chief executive Gary Teichmann told this reporter that the Sharks could not comment on the matter.

The South African Rugby Union’s (Saru) Andy Colquhoun said the same, and it is understand­able because the judicial process has yet to take place.

Neither the Sharks nor Saru can comment on a case that is yet to return a guilty verdict, even though it is known that Ralepelle is the Sharks player that was caught out by the random visit to Sharks training by Saids.

When I phoned Ralepelle on Monday, he denied that he had failed a doping test and said that his absence from the Shark Tank was due to an infection incurred after a scope done on his knee.

The speculatio­n around Ralepelle thickened last week when former Sharks hooker Craig Burden was spotted watching a Sharks training session and then later that day underwent a medical with a view to signing for the Sharks.

Burden, now 33, left the Sharks in 2013 for a career in France which saw him play for Toulon, Montpellie­r and Stade Francais before recently returning to Durban for his wedding and retirement from rugby.

It is understood that the Sharks’ contingenc­y plan for the expected two-year-ban for Ralepelle has been to sign Burden until the end of next year’s Super Rugby competitio­n.

In 2010, Ralepelle and fellow Springbok Bjorn Basson also tested positive for the stimulant methylhexa­namine while on tour in Edinburgh, but were found to not be at fault, as the substance was apparently contained in Springbok-approved supplement­s.

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