The Daily Telegraph

‘Justin is going to do it, just like every other sprinter in America is going to do it’

Doping is rife among track and field athletes, claimed top sports agent to undercover reporters

- By Hayley Dixon, Claire Newell and Daniel Foggo

‘Now it is a money thing, now you have labs and universiti­es design drugs for you which there is no test for’

IT WAS 28 degrees and the world champion had been doing gruelling 500-metre sprint training. Out of breath and clutching a bottle of water, Justin Gatlin stood by the side of the track and praised his “racetrack agent” as “a good guy” whose “connection­s run deep”. The man he was talking about was Robert Wagner, an Austrian train station manager turned sports agent who has represente­d a host of household-name athletes.

Now Wagner was offering to help an actor get into shape for a film role and had promised to provide him with testostero­ne and human growth hormone. Wagner boasted that “everybody does it” and offered up several Olympic gold-medal athletes to assist with a training programme for the fictitious actor.

To that end he had proposed letting the actor stay and train with Gatlin at the US athlete’s Florida base and had set up a meeting between the ‘film producers’ and track star. But as he stood discussing how the actor would become a part of his “extended family”, Gatlin had no idea that the people he was meeting were actually undercover reporters. Nor was he aware that Wagner had claimed to undercover reporters that Gatlin was using banned performanc­e-enhancing drugs.

Wagner has worked behind the scenes of athletics for more than 30 years, maintainin­g his official agency registrati­on despite representi­ng stars who have failed doping tests – including sprinter Kelli White whom he would later marry.

Covertly recorded tapes show how the Austrian lives a jet-set lifestyle, with a business based in Monaco and homes in the Austrian Alps and Florida and an involvemen­t with a training academy in Kingston, Jamaica.

But the promise of a lucrative movie consultanc­y contract from the undercover reporters proved too tempting.

Asking for a total fee of almost $250,000, he boasted that he could enlist the help of some of the biggest names in the business and a selection of doctors from across the world who he could “trust” to prescribe, oversee and administer growth hormone and testostero­ne.

Wagner, who is registered with the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Athletics Federation­s (IAAF), set up meetings with Gatlin and his coach Dennis Mitchell, a former relay gold medallist.

Despite his apparent success it took only two meetings with a complete stranger, posing as a fixer who needed to get a film star into shape for a role as a sprinter, for Wagner to start boasting about the secretive world of sport.

“There is so much room for blackmaili­ng and dirty games,” Wagner claimed. “Every sport. Whatever does money does corruption.”

He also began to reveal a familiarit­y with drugs commonly used in doping. Growth hormone and testostero­ne could be used as a “plan B”, he said, adding: “Growth hormones, because they get rid of the weight immediatel­y.”

It was “magic stuff” that could also reduce wrinkles, he said, explaining that “all good things are illegal, trust me”. “It was a normal thing in the 80s until they started to put things on the ban list, right? When I started track and field everybody – every sprinter – was taking it,” he explained.

When asked if it was still happening, Wagner said: “Now it is a money thing, now you have labs and universiti­es dehuman

sign drugs for you which there is no test for. There’s one thing I’m sure, this federation and this sport knows that they’re doing something but they cannot really put their finger on [it], they don’t know what it is and knowing somebody has taken something and proving it in a court is two different things.” As his confidence in the undercover reporters grew, so did Wagner’s descriptio­ns of the way doping worked and he assembled a team who he said the reporters could “trust” to talk openly about the drug treatment as they are “on our page”.

Mitchell was present when Wagner claimed during one meeting next to a racetrack in Florida that they had used the drugs before ‘with athletes’. Wagner, apparently unconcerne­d that it was likely to be illegal to acquire and supply prescripti­on-only drugs, claimed that “we don’t even have a moral issue” as the man [actor] was not competing.

Meanwhile, Mitchell reassured the reporters that he would be able to spot any side effects of taking HGH, such as an enlarged heart, as he could watch the changes in the body and the way he recovered.

Wagner planned for the actor to travel to Florida, where Mitchell would “babysit” him, and they would hire a chef, with meal plans provided by a dietician, and a driver. When asked how the “pharmaceut­icals” would be administer­ed, he said: “Well as I said, if he doesn’t care whether this comes out one day or not then we can find a doctor, but...”

When pushed on who would be deciding how much was needed, and who would administer it, he said: “Me and Dennis.” On the premise that “this doesn’t leave this table”, Wagner said he had used the drug before and explained that it was like an insulin injection and did not go directly into the bloodstrea­m but if the concerns continued then both he and Mitchell were confident that they could get a physician to administer it.

He said: “He won’t get a shock, because we’re not gonna start with a full

dosage. We will go slow, also after three weeks, you need one week off.”

He said that he would get the stuff from a doctor in Austria and then fly in with it as he trusted European doctors over American ones to get quality drugs and not counterfei­ts from China.

“Nobody stops you when you’re in a suit and tie,” he explained when asked if he was comfortabl­e taking the drugs through customs.

“I fly to America once a month. This, this is a little box I bring… for personal use I can always bring whatever I want, especially when I have a paper that goes with it, which has my name in my suitcase.”

He said that he would “take one for the team” as Mitchell would not want to get the prescripti­on. “A relay coach in USA track and field, I don’t think you want a banned substance on your name,” he pointed out.

When asked to spell out privately whether he knew what he was doing, Wagner claimed: “I will deny this ever happened... I cannot tell you openly in front of five people that this is what we’re always doing left and right.”

He then alleged: “This is what track and field is about… You think Justin is not doing this? Do you think Dennis wasn’t doing this? Everybody does it!”

When asked if his experience was historic or whether doping was still going on, he replied: “Three months ago, before the season ended, right now, obviously, and as soon as the season starts.” He then claimed: “Justin is going to do it, just like every other sprinter in America is going to do it. They have to do it.”

Gatlin has “categorica­lly denied” the use of any performanc­e-enhancing drug and says that Wagner is not his regular agent and would not be in a position to know. Gatlin’s lawyers added that their client had undergone monthly drug testing since 2012 with no adverse findings.

To prove his credential­s, Wagner emailed a picture of a syringe and a vial of what appears to be Peptidepro­s FRAG 176-191 2mg – a synthetic form of

‘These athletes are out there taking all these chances but they don’t know what’s going to happen to their body’

growth hormone, describing it as the “special nutrition and the insulin needles which will be used”.

In the meeting, Wagner told reporters: “This is what it is in sports right? And the synthetic ones cannot be detected. You can test them up and down but anyway it’s not, is not going to find it.” Assuring the undercover reporter, he said: “You are in our field of expertise, 100 per cent.”

When he was asked if he had a reliable doctor in Austria, Wagner said: “Obviously they’re all fine. All these athletes are fine.” He added: “I cannot openly, in front of four people, say that we do this every day.”

Wagner claimed: “It cannot be found in the body... Because it is synthetica­lly produced. You cannot find something like that.” He said that to develop a test for a product they needed to actually have it so they knew what they were looking for and laboratori­es could then change the structure and make it undetectab­le again.

He continued: “Even if you mix two products, it’s over, you cannot find it. Next thing is, that test has to hold in a court.” He said that if an agency attempted to prosecute and it didn’t hold up, then they could be sued for “millions” by that athlete.

“By the time they have a test, people are already using the next, next generation,” he explained. “And they hope this next generation is better than the old generation right…

“And EPO is called EPO. If you don’t mix it with another product, yes they can find you. If people don’t have the knowledge and the money to buy the proper things or get one of them fixed up then you got a problem.”

But as he confided in one reporter, Mitchell sat just metres away insisting to a second that “my athletes are clean”.

He explained: “Well the thing that’s popular in our sports now, and I’m talking to you hypothetic­al, like we don’t know for sure, this is what I hear.

“What’s going on in the sport now is that people are taking things what are called tailored type drugs.

“Yeah, because in order for somebody to get caught, there is like, like a DNA strain that particular steroid has, right? And they test for that strain.

“Right, well you know a DNA strain has all kinds of chemicals connected to it. They pull one out, put something else in. Now it is totally different. So that’s a tailored kind of drug, the only problem with that is you don’t know what it gives you on the other end as the side effects.

“See what I’m saying? So these athletes are out there taking all these chances but they don’t know what’s going to happen to their body. They could grow a third leg 10 years from now. You just don’t know.” Mitchell has since issued a statement denying that he agreed to take part in a training programme using banned substances. He said that Gatlin had not used any performanc­e-enhancing drugs since he had begun coaching him in 2011.

Earlier this month, the men arranged for undercover reporters to meet Gatlin at the training ground, where the world champion, who has twice been banned for doping, said that they “welcomed” people joining the “extended family”. When told that the scheme had been set up by Wagner, who he has known for many years, Gatlin said: “He’s a good guy. His connection­s run deep, deeper than he allows us to know.”

Wagner said that he had informed the IAAF Integrity Unit about his communicat­ion with undercover reporters in November. “I wasn’t involved in doping,” he said. “Obviously I played along because I knew what was going on. I had to get them hooked.”

When asked about his claims that his colleagues used banned substances, he said:“i told her that to get the job.”

He denied that he knew of Gatlin’s use of performanc­e-enhancing drugs, saying: “I am not Justin Gatlin’s agent, how would I know that.”

Additional reporting by Luke Heighton and Callum Adams

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom