Morning Sun

Sources: NCAA has not tested for drugs at championsh­ips

- By Eddie Pells

The NCAA has not tested players for performanc­e-enhancing drugs at March Madness and other recent college championsh­ips, The Associated Press has learned. Three people with direct knowledge of NCAA testing protocols said full-scale testing has not resumed since the coronaviru­s pandemic shut down college sports a year ago.

Although athletes may have been tested on campus, either through the NCAA program or those run by schools, the NCAA has not ramped up its usual testing program at national championsh­ips such as the men’s and women’s basketball tournament­s. The tournament­s wrap up with Final Four games starting with the women’s semifinals Friday.

The NCAA has tested for drugs since 1986, and has changed and enhanced its policy over the years. Unlike some leagues and anti-doping organizati­ons, it does not reveal the number of tests it conducts. Players who test positive can be kicked out of championsh­ips, and can lose a year or more of eligibilit­y.

But the three people familiar with testing protocols told AP that the number of tests received from NCAA events went to zero after the COVID-19 pandemic shut down sports last spring. They said testing has recently resumed sporadical­ly, but only via on-campus collection­s.

The people, who did not want their names used because of the sensitivit­y of the subject, all confirmed the same thing: No tests from the organizati­on’s signature events — the men’s and women’s basketball tournament­s and, earlier this year, the college football playoffs — have been received by the labs that analyze the NCAA tests.

The NCAA wouldn’t answer questions about specifics of its drug-testing program, and says the mere possibilit­y of unannounce­d tests can be a deterrent to doping. In an email exchange with the AP, NCAA spokesman Chris Radford would not answer whether testing was being conducted for players after they arrived in Indianapol­is and San Antonio for the tournament­s in mid-march.

“We do not confirm drug testing at championsh­ips sites, especially when they are ongoing,” the NCAA’S chief medical officer, Brian Hainline, told AP in a follow-up email. “That would defeat the purpose of our unannounce­d testing at championsh­ips. Further, we do not announce when we perform our extensive year-round unannounce­d drug testing outside of championsh­ips.”

This shutdown comes as the NCAA focuses on coronaviru­s testing as a way of keeping March Madness on track. On Thursday, NCAA president Mark Emmert said the associatio­n had conducted more than 41,000 COVID-19 tests over the course of the basketball tournament­s.

Though drug testing in college sports doesn’t receive as much scrutiny as in Olympic sports, the issue has impacted major programs.

At the college football playoff that closed the 2018 season, three Clemson players were suspended after testing positive for a performanc­e-enhancing drug. In 2015, the NCAA sanctioned the Syracuse basketball program for a variety of violations, including not following its own drug-testing rules.

The NCAA manual on drug-testing says: “NCAA drug-testing is a possibilit­y at any and all NCAA championsh­ip rounds and sites.

However, as a best practice, the NCAA will not announce whether or not drug testing will occur at any specific venue.”

While the unpredicta­bility can work as a deterrent, some sports officials say not conducting actual tests can leave a sport open to doped athletes winning championsh­ips.

“If you don’t actually follow through and do the testing, that could be perceived as a weak link,” said Bob Copeland, who cleaned up a steroid-addled football program when he was athletic director at University of Waterloo in Canada. Copeland said he was speaking about doping protocols in general and wasn’t familiar with the NCAA’S rules.

The NCAA wasn’t alone in putting its testing program on hiatus in the immediate aftermath of the coronaviru­s outbreak. Sending collectors out to gather urine and blood samples was deemed too risky, and most U.S. and internatio­nal testing programs went dark.

The anti-doping tests were deemed too important to leave shuttered for the longterm, however, and when major events such as the Olympics were placed back on the schedule, sports organizati­ons started finding new ways to resume testing.

It’s possible the NCAA didn’t want to add sample collectors to the mix of people that would have to be cleared to have close contact with players at the arenas, which is where the urine collection traditiona­lly takes place. It’s also possible that the shift in focus has come as the NCAA invested heavily in COVID-19 testing and COVID-19 protocols. Typically, a doping test for college sports would cost between $150 and $200 to process, and only a fraction of players in a given game would be tested.

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