The Mail on Sunday

Racing’s growing cocaine problem

Jockeys’ chief calls for stiffer penalties to tackle troubling rise in positive tests

- By Marcus Townend RACING CORRESPOND­ENT

THE Profession­al Jockeys’ Associatio­n are hoping stiffer penalties for riders who test positive for cocaine will be in place by as early as July, as racing ramps up measures to tackle what has become a growing problem for the sport.

By then, the result sofa groundbrea­king two-month trial by the British Horseracin­g Authority and wholeheart­edly driven by the PJA using rapid saliva testing should have been assessed.

The near-instant results of the saliva test mean a jockey testing positive can be stood down immediatel­y pending a confirmato­ry urine test and not put weighing-room colleagues at risk by riding while impaired.

The simplicity and cost effectiven­ess of saliva testing, which took place at Lingfield and Kempton last week, also means screening can be expanded.

Currently, a jockey testing positive for cocaine for the first time can expect a six-month ban. But new proposals are likely to see that doubled, with even longer bans for the most serious cases.

Paul Struthers, chief executive of the PJA, said: ‘What is quite clear is that, while a six-month penalty is a significan­t financial and reputation­al sanction, it has not been working. I would hope the penalty structure would change when saliva testing ceases to be a pilot and becomes the way we do our drug testing.

‘I don’t think we need much more than the two-month period because the BHA are going to be reviewing throughout. I’d be pretty confident we are looking at July for the revised penalty structure. The sort of thing we are looking at is a oneyear entry point with a range of six months for the person who makes one solitary bad decision and fully co- operates throughout and 18 months for the most serious cases.

‘ Ultimately what will be the deterrent will be far more testing. Getting caught is the deterrent, regardless of the penalty.’

Struthers faces the strongest calls for even stricter penalties from within the jockeys’ own ranks.

Derby-winning jockey Martin Dwyer said: ‘We do not want to be goi ng o ut t here riding against jockeys who are not in a fit state of mind to ride their horses properly.

‘ We have wanted more testing and none of the jockeys I have spoken to are against increasing penalties as well. I just don’t think there is any excuse now. People should be educated enough that they should know better.

‘If people have personal problems there is plenty of help out there and people can reach out and talk to someone before they feel they have to take drugs. I don’t think there is a massive problem within the weighing room with drugs. It is a problem with society spilling over into our sport.’

Alarm bells have been ringing, with 11 jockeys testing positive for cocaine in the past two years. They included 42- year-old Flat jockey Adrian McCarthy, who was 1,000 times over the threshold for cocaine when riding at Chelmsford in October 2020.

Champion Flat jockey O is in Murphy served a three-month ban over the winter after testing positive for cocaine last summer in France, though he denied taking the Class A drug, saying he had been contaminat­ed via a sexual encounter.

More recently, Benoit De La Sayette, arising star of the apprentice ranks who won the prestigiou­s Lincoln Handicap at Doncaster in March, had a hair test, another thing the PJA are pressing for, that produced a positive cocaine test. He faces a six-month suspension and having to sit out the Flat Turf season.

Brant Dunshea, the BHA’s chief regulatory officer, said: ‘The advent of saliva testing could feasibly be a significan­t developmen­t. It is more cost effective than urine testing and, if the pilot is successful, could lead to an increased testing capacity.

‘ We are injecting further investment into this area and could be looking to see an initial increase of about 50 per cent in the amount of tests we carry out each year.

‘Potentiall­y increasing penalties is another question on our radar and we are speaking to the PJA.’

 ??  ?? POSITIVE TEST: De la Sayette
POSITIVE TEST: De la Sayette

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