Daily Mail

Jones handed UEFA ban for abusing drug tester

- By MIKE KEEGAN and MATT LAWTON

Manchester United defender Phil Jones has been banned for two matches after he verbally abused a UeFa anti- doping officer at the europa League final.

the 25-year-old, also fined €5,000 (£4,500) ‘for not immediatel­y going to the doping control room’, will miss the super cup final against real Madrid next week and United’s first champions League match. team-mate Daley Blind was also fined for a delay in reporting to the doping control room, with the europa League winners fined a further €10,000 (£9,000).

Jones was an unused substitute in the 2-0 victory over ajax in May. It is understood that the england internatio­nal gave blood and urine samples but expressed frustratio­n to officials that he had missed a dressing-room photoshoot aimed at honouring the victims of the Manchester terror attack, which occurred two days earlier.

Jones (below) was charged for insulting and directing abusive language towards the doping control officer, along with a ‘lack of co- operation and respect towards the doping control procedure’.

Blind was charged for ‘violation and non-compliance’ with UeFa anti- doping regulation­s, which state that ‘every player designated to undergo a doping control is personally responsibl­e for reporting immediatel­y to the doping control station as notified’.

Both were keen to celebrate with team-mates and to be in the picture, in which United’s staff held a banner emblazoned with the words: ‘Manchester — a city United’. Blind did so and was accompanie­d by a UeFa chaperone to ensure he could not interfere with a drugs test.

But his failure to immediatel­y report to the doping control station saw him fined. the World antiDoping agency code states that such offences fall under the jurisdicti­on of the sport’s governing body. ‘Offensive conduct towards a doping control official or other person involved in doping control which does not otherwise constitute tampering shall be addressed in the disciplina­ry rules of sport organisati­ons,’ it states. UeFa last night said: ‘Phil Jones was given a two-match suspension for using offensive language towards the doping control officer (article 15.1 (b) of the disciplina­ry regulation­s) and was fined €5,000 for not immediatel­y going to the doping control room (article 6.05 of the antidoping regulation­s).’

article 15.1 (b) does indeed state that directing abusive language at a match official — ‘a match official also refers to a doping control officer,’ says the UeFa rule book — can lead to ‘suspension for two competitio­n matches or a specified period’.

Further to that, paragraph 29 of the anti-doping regulation­s makes it clear that ‘the team concerned is responsibl­e for ensuring that the players drawn to undergo a doping control are informed and instructed to report to the doping control station within 60 minutes of being notified or as otherwise instructed by the doping control officer’. hence United’s fine.

this is not the first time United have encountere­d issues with doping control officers. In 2003 rio Ferdinand was banned for eight months for leaving the club’s training ground after being informed that he had been selected to give an out-of-competitio­n drugs test.

United declined to comment on the incidents in May. they have three days to appeal and were last night undecided on the matter.

 ??  ?? Left out: a jubilant Jones on the pitch (left), but he was not in United’s dressing room (above) GETTY IMAGES
Left out: a jubilant Jones on the pitch (left), but he was not in United’s dressing room (above) GETTY IMAGES
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