The Scotsman

Wright insists Scottish rugby doesn’t have a ‘dope culture’

● Ex-lions prop praises anti-drug efforts

- By DUNCAN SMITH

Scotland and Lions prop Peter Wright is confident that there is no “culture” of doping in Scottish rugby as he welcomed the news that former Marr prop Andrew Acton has been banned for nearly four years after testing positive for anabolic steroids.

The Boroughmui­r coach believes the SRU has by and large got things right in recent years with the system they have, in associatio­n with UK Anti-doping, to police with appropriat­e vigilance. However, Wright says he doesn’t see it as being a major issue in the game here.

“I honestly don’t think there is a culture of it in Scotland in contrast to some other countries, Wales being an example recently with the number of bans they’ve handed out,” said the man who was capped 21 times in the 1990s and toured with the 1993 Lions.

“The only real big one we’ve had is Craig Chalmers’ lad Sam a few years back. In all my years in club rugby it’s never been anything I’ve suspected to be happening. Certainly all the clubs I was involved with as a player and coach… well culturally it just wasn’t there.”

Craig Chalmers spoke about his son’s case – he served a twoyear ban after testing positive for steroids while with Scotland Under-20s – in an interview with The Scotsman at the weekend. The Grand Slam hero Chalmers said: “He was under pressure from coaches to bulk up. He got in with the wrong people and made a bad decision which cost him dearly. He regrets it but has done his time, helping with doping awareness.”

South African prop Acton, 22, was immediatel­y suspended by BT Premiershi­p club Marr and has since left the Ayrshire club after a test he provided at a training session last August was conformer firmed positive for the prohibited substance stanozolol-n-glucuronid­e on 8 September, the day before the club season began. On Monday he was banned from all sport for three years and nine months.

Meanwhile, just a day after it was revealed South-africanbor­n Scotland No 8 Cornell du Preez would leave Edinburgh at the end of the season for cost reasons, Worcester Warriors annoucned he will be joining them. former edinburgh head coach Alan Solomons is the director of rugby at Sixways.

Du Preez’s fellow back-row David Denton, who came on in Scotland 32-26 win over France on Sunday, is to leave Worcester in the summer.

 ??  ?? PETER WRIGHT “At all the clubs I was involved with as a player and coach… culturally it just wasn’t there”
PETER WRIGHT “At all the clubs I was involved with as a player and coach… culturally it just wasn’t there”

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