San Diego Union-Tribune

Accused doper’s excuse finally proves to be true

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Nowhere in the complex labyrinth of rules, bylaws and interpreta­tions that govern the global anti-doping system did anyone see this warning: Beware of Dog Medicine, writes

Eddie Pells of The Associated Press.

Katerina Nash, a mountain biker and cross-country skier who represente­d the Czech Republic in two Winter and three Summer Olympics, avoided a four-year doping sanction after minute traces of a banned substance showed up in her system. Through testing, authoritie­s determined the substance got there through her skin during the messy struggles she faced in forcing medicine drops down the throat of her ailing dog, a Vizsla named Rubi.

Nash’s encounter with anti-doping authoritie­s still went on the books Thursday, a byproduct of long-enshrined rules that call for any doping violation — even an inadverten­t “adverse analytical finding” such as this one — to be announced publicly.

“It’s devastatin­g to think that, like, not washing my hands could ruin my entire career, being an athlete for 30 years,” Nash said. “But there’s no regrets. I would not have cared for my dog in any different way. But in the end, I was touching this medicine every day for about three straight weeks.”

Nash, 45, lives in California and was tested by authoritie­s from the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency. A trace amount (0.07 billionths of a gram per milliliter) of a substance called capromorel­in had shown up in Nash’s urine. Though the amount was minuscule, it was enough to trigger an adverse finding.

Sadly, the medicine did not save Rubi.

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