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Shaw ban puts BCCI under pressure to spruce up anti-doping procedures

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NEW DELHI: India’s powerful cricket board is under pressure to bring its anti-doping procedures into line with world standards ater questions were raised over the ban handed to teenage star Prithvi Shaw.

Shaw, the 19-year-old prodigy oten compared to Sachin Tendulkar, last week received an eightmonth ban ater the Board of Control for Cricket in India ruled he “inadverten­tly ingested a prohibited substance (terbutalin­e), which can commonly be found in cough syrups”.

Shaw’s ban was backdated to March 16, despite the fact he was playing for the Delhi Capitals in the Indian Premier League until May 8. He will be available again from Nov.16, just ater the start of India’s internatio­nal season.

The BCCI insists on handling its doping analysis and sanctions in-house, rebuffing pressure from India’s government and the World Anti-doping Agency to come under the ambit of India’s Wada accredited national anti-doping body.

However, concern is growing about the arrangemen­ts, with many calling for more rigorous testing by an independen­t body.

“The Indian Board does not have a robust anti do ping set-up and cricketers are not regularly tested during all national and age-group competitio­ns,” The Hindustan Times said, adding that Shaw was given the “lightest sentence possible”.

Last year, Indian all-rounder Yusuf Pathan also tested positive for terbutalin­e and received a backdated ban ater the BCCI accepted he took it “inadverten­tly”, offering the same explanatio­n that the drug is oten found in cough syrups.

Terbutalin­e is a bronchodil­ator, expanding air passages in the lungs. Such substances can raise oxygen levels in the blood, helping stamina, speed and recovery, The Hindustan Times said.

BCCI anti-doping manager Abhijit Salvi said the Indian board doesn’t do its testing through the National Anti-doping Agency (NADA) because it is concerned about its standards.

“If we would have been happy with NADA’S performanc­e then BCCI would not have had an issue,” Salvi told AFP.

“I am sure you have read reports as well about NADA’S inefficien­cies.”

He also rebuffed suggestion­s of a procedural lapse in the Shaw case, given his ban was backdated to a time when he was still playing.

Salvi said Shaw had probably been too “casual” by taking an over-the-counter medicine, despite attending “at least three” classes on anti-doping organised by the BCCI.

“He probably had a casual approach to it and that’s why he tested positive,” Salvi told AFP.

The BCCI is the world’s richest cricket body and generates about 70 percent of the sport’s global revenues. Shaw, meanwhile, is one of Indian cricket’s hottest properties ater he hit a century on his Test debut last year, becoming India’s second-youngest centurion ater Tendulkar.

India’ s government has repeatedly a temp ted to bring the BCCI into line with other sports by carrying out its drug testing through the national agency.

“A leter has been sent through NADA to the BCCI to get their players tested through them like any other sports body in the country,” a source in the sports ministry told AFP last week.

“Because NADA is the only approved agency for handling dope offences. BCCI’S response on this mater is still awaited. The ministry is keen for the mater to be resolved as soon as possible.”

Last year, WADA urged the Internatio­nal Cricket Council to intervene in mater. NADA chief Navin Agarwal told AFP that bringing Indian cricket on board remained a “work in progress”.

Doping cases are rare in cricket. One of the most prominent was in 2003, when Australia’s Shane Warne received a year’s suspension for taking a banned diuretic, blaming dieting pills given to him by his mother.

In 2006, Pakistan’s Shoaib Akhtar and Mohammad Asif escaped bans for testing positive for the steroid nandrolone ater the Pakistan Cricket Board accepted they did not take the drug intentiona­lly.

One Indian cricketer, who wanted to remain anonymous, said young players shouldn’t be expected to monitor what is going into their bodies.

 ??  ?? ↑ India’s Prithvi Shaw last week received an eight-month ban after the BCCI ruled he ‘inadverten­tly ingested a prohibited substance (terbutalin­e), commonly found in cough syrups’.
↑ India’s Prithvi Shaw last week received an eight-month ban after the BCCI ruled he ‘inadverten­tly ingested a prohibited substance (terbutalin­e), commonly found in cough syrups’.

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