Scottish Daily Mail

FURYS TO BLAME FAILED DRUG TEST ON EATING OFFAL

- By LAURIE WHITWELL

TYSON FURY and his cousin Hughie are set to claim they failed drugs tests after eating vast amounts of contaminat­ed offal, Sportsmail understand­s. Charges against the cousins will be heard by the National AntiDoping Panel next month, with the Fury camp thought to be confident of avoiding bans. The pair will argue they unwittingl­y tested positive for a banned steroid because they eat a whole boar, including its internal organs and entrails, between them each week. The Furys — Hughie, 22, and Tyson, 28 — strenuousl­y deny using drugs to boost performanc­e. Their legal team will argue that eating the liver of an animal that has been fed steroids to enhance its growth can leave traceable amounts in a human body. A farmer is set to testify that the Furys buy a boar from him each week. The case has been protracted, with both heavyweigh­t boxers provisiona­lly suspended on June 24 last year after failing tests by UK Anti-Doping. The ban was lifted in August ahead of an NADP hearing, which is scheduled to finally take place next month. Peter Fury, the pair’s trainer and Hughie’s father, could not comment due to the ongoing legal proceeding­s. UKAD director of communicat­ions Emily Robinson said: ‘UK Anti-Doping is unable to comment on ongoing cases.’ There are precedents for the Furys’ planned line of defence. Tong Wen, an Olympic gold medal-winning judoka from China, blamed pork chops when she tested positive for the steroid clenbutero­l in 2009. She was cleared due to ‘procedural failure’ in the laboratory tests. A year later cyclist Alberto Contador cited a beef steak as the cause of clenbutero­l traces being found in his system, but the Spaniard was banned by the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport in 2012. In December 2011 UKAD issued a warning advising athletes against eating liver due to the small risk of returning a positive clenbutero­l sample if the meat was contaminat­ed. Tyson Fury has not fought since becoming world champion by beating Wladimir Klitschko in 2015. Last year he cited an injured ankle when pulling out of a rematch against Klitschko on the day UKAD suspended him for the positive test. He vacated his WBO and WBA titles due to ill-health and the next day the British Boxing Board of Control suspended his licence. But this week Fury announced plans to return to the ring in July and he has started training in Marbella. On Sunday Hughie Fury pulled out of his title fight against WBO heavyweigh­t champion Joseph Parker with a back injury.

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