Daily Mail

Doping ban for father and son

- By MARCUS TOWNEND Racing Correspond­ent

STEPHEN and Michael McConville attempted to deceive stewards when banned substances were found in their possession at the Cheltenham Festival, a disciplina­ry hearing was told as the pair were banned for three years yesterday.

The father and son team from Northern Ireland admitted giving the prohibited drugs to Anseanacha­i Cliste before he was due to run in the Foxhunter Chase on March 17. Both claimed they did not know the substances contained banned products.

Anseanacha­i Cliste, a 33-1 shot who subsequent­ly won the Ulster National, was withdrawn from the Foxhunter Chase by Cheltenham stewards. A routine inspection of a bag had found blood- stained syringes as well as the banned adrenal cortex and hemo-15.

The latter contains cobalt, a high priority substance for the British Horseracin­g Authority because it is a naturally occurring dietary trace mineral which promotes red blood cell count and oxygen- carrying capacity at heightened levels.

Cobalt has been central to a number of cases in Australia, but this was the first one in Britain, with tests showing levels of the element in Anseanacha­i Cliste seven times higher than normal.

The McConville­s, from Portadown, told BHA officials at Cheltenham that they had administer­ed the substances to try to replace nutrients lost by Anseanacha­i Cliste after he had suffered a difficult trip to Britain by ferry. But Tim Naylor, representi­ng the BHA, said both men had committed a ‘serious breach of BHA anti-doping rules’.

He added: ‘The BHA does not accept Michael or Stephen believed adrenalin might calm the horse down.’

The McConville­s’ legal representa­tive Conor Dufficy said the pair ‘accepted a gross error of judgment on their part’. He added: ‘They panicked and concocted a story that they thoroughly regret.’

In delivering the verdict, panel chairman Tim Charlton QC said: ‘This was a deliberate breach of rules, combined with the welfare risks they took. There was an element of premeditat­ion.’

The McConville­s received reduced bans for admitting their guilt. They said in a statement: ‘We apologise for what has happened, which was of our own doing due to a lack of knowledge. However, this is no excuse for what happened.’

 ?? HEALY RACING ?? Apologetic: jockey Michael McConville and his dad Stephen
HEALY RACING Apologetic: jockey Michael McConville and his dad Stephen

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