The Star (Jamaica)

US anti- doping agency wants to help Ja recover from doping scandal

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Tthe he United States AntiDoping Agency ( USADA) says it wants to help

Jamaica Anti- Doping Commission ( JADCO) recover from a doping scandal that has rocked the athletics world.

Chief Executive Travis Tygart sig- nalled USADA’s interest in assisting JADCO on the sidelines of the World Conference on Doping in Sport in South Africa this week.

Tygart said JADCO “reached out” to the USADA after an inspection visit to Jamaica late last month by a team from WADA.

“They need to get help. We want to see the WADA code implemente­d, and their athletes deserve better,” Tygart said.

“Right now, they’re being let down by their national doping ( commission).”

The three bodies have continued discussion­s on a USADA- JADCO partnershi­p at the World Conference on Doping in Sport in South Africa.

Tygart says USADA was “ready and willing” to help, and already has aided their Jamaican counterpar­ts by sending a team there in 2009 and hosting some Jamaican officials at the USADA offices in the United States.

But the USADA head warned that it would only work with JADCO if there was a “concerted effort” to improve its anti- doping efforts.

The WADA audit of Jamaica’s anti- doping processes came after it was revealed there was a near complete breakdown of its out- ofcompetit­ion testing in the run- up to last year’s London Olympics.

Eight Jamaican athletes have failed drug tests this year, including former world 100- metre record holder Asafa Powell.

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Travis Tygart

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