Business Day

Rugby produces most positive doping tests — report

- Craig Ray Cape Town

The annual report of the SA Institute for Drug-Free Sport (Saids) makes for uncomforta­ble reading for rugby particular­ly‚ as it returned the most adverse findings. Saids conducted 1,584 tests across a wide range of sports. Athletics and rugby were the most targeted, with 427 and 342 tests respective­ly. Rugby produced 16 adverse findings‚ or 4.7% positive tests‚ including six schoolboys from samples taken at the 2018 Craven Week. It does not make the sport look good on the eve of Rugby World Cup in Japan. The sport was rocked in August when star wing Aphiwe Dyantyi returned a positive A and B sample for the use of three anabolic steroids. Dyantyi maintains his innocence, but unless he can produce compelling and plausible evidence about how the substances appeared in his system‚ he is likely to be banned for four years. On Tuesday Springbok assistant coach Matt Proudfoot faced uncomforta­ble questionin­g from members of the Irish media in Tokyo about doping in SA rugby. “It’s not a good look for rugby because the internatio­nal average for positive tests is about 1%‚” Saids CEO Khalid Galant said. “SA is in the top 10 for adverse findings. But there are a lot of factors and variables to

consider as well. We have a very sophistica­ted programme and rugby is one of the most tested sports because the country competes at a very high level. “I’m not saying there isn’ ta doping or steroid problem in rugby, but we do have the most sophistica­ted labs in Africa.

“Rugby is also targeted more because it’s a sport with a high commercial value. Football and cricket are high-participat­ion sports but seen as medium risk in terms of doping. “The last positive test we had in football was three years ago, and that was for cocaine, and in cricket we had a marijuana positive a few years back and another player for a stimulant found in weight-loss products. “More tests are conducted in SA rugby than in New Zealand, for example,” Galant said. Across all sports, Saids said there were 50 antidoping rule violations. The report also outlines how a partnershi­p with the Directorat­e for Priority Crime Investigat­ion led to the prosecutio­n of two athletes for traffickin­g and tampering with_ doping control processes. Saids also successful­ly prosecuted an Athlete Biological Passport case against a leading national cyclist during the

reporting period.

The 1‚584 tests represent a decline from the 1‚659 in 2017/2018‚ but Galant said that this is an “ongoing trend as our test distributi­on plan becomes increasing­ly targeted and riskbased‚ rather than random”. There were 46 antidoping rule violations in 2017/2018. All six schoolboys at the Craven Week tested positive for anabolic steroids. Galant expressed concern at the number of antidoping rule violations at schoolboy level and pointed to a “high tolerance by parents and coaches to doping practices”.

RUGBY PRODUCED 16 ADVERSE FINDINGS‚ OR 4.7% POSITIVE TESTS‚ INCLUDING SIX SCHOOLBOYS FROM SAMPLES TAKEN AT THE 2018 CRAVEN WEEK

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