The Star Early Edition

Paula slams plan to wipe out records

Radcliffe is set to lose her world record for the marathon if UKA has its way and starts the record books fresh

- MATT MAJENDIE

PAULA RADCLIFFE has criticised UK Athletics for proposals to rip up athletics’ world records and start from scratch as part of wide-ranging plans to clean up the muchmalign­ed sport.

UKA published 14 recommenda­tions under the banner “A Manifesto for Clean Athletics” Monday, which involved wiping out the record books, including Radcliffe’s marathon world mark set in London in 2003, and calling for lifetime bans for athletes caught cheating.

While backing the proposals in general, Radcliffe said of resetting all the existing records: “I think the idea is well intentione­d but has not been thought through properly. I think scrapping all world records is not something that could ever happen.

“I’m all for records being erased of proven cheats, but doing this across the board would simply be punishing the innocent and clean athletes.”

Radcliffe played a role in putting together the manifesto, being interviewe­d for an hour and a half by a UKA official for her views on how to clean up the sport. Her suggestion of athletes failing drug tests having their entire set of results erased did not make the list of recommenda­tions.

The UKA proposals also include a global public register of all drugs tests, that the supply and procuremen­t of performanc­e-enhancing drugs be criminalis­ed and for national federation­s to pay compensati­on to athletes denied by drug cheats in what it called “the new clean athletics era”.

The World Anti-Doping Agency (Wada) is currently opposed to lifetime bans for athletes and its current code is not due to be revised until 2021. Any proposal to push for lifetime suspension­s is likely to fall on deaf ears.

However, the UKA chairman, Ed Warner, said: “This may be seen by many as a mission impossible, but we have to go for what’s perceived as the impossible.

“What we’re saying is let’s go up from four-year bans for the most serious offences.”

Warner, who discussed the proposals in question with the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Athletics Federation­s president, Sebastian Coe, Monday, defended the proposal to eradicate Radcliffe’s long-standing record.

He said: “This is about, for example, the sprint events and the records of Florence Griffith Joyner in the 100m and 200m.

“If, say, Dafne Schippers gets close to those, then people say she must be a cheat and that’s not right.

“So this is not about being partisan with three British athletes in those record books, this is about what’s right for the future of our sport.”

Warner added that Coe “is in favour” of picking off those records that are clearly wrong and said: “If he can do that, then wonderful and let’s get on with it.”

The IAAF faces another week of potentiall­y devastatin­g headlines with the publicatio­n of the Wada independen­t commission’s second report in Munich tomorrow into the doping scandal to have engulfed athletics.

On Friday, the IAAF sent a 30-page response to the independen­t commission’s first report, which uncovered what it called state-sponsored doping in Russia and which saw the IAAF accused of “systemic failures”.

The governing body reacted angrily as it made its response public yesterday. In conclusion, it said: “While the IAAF certainly cannot be and is not complacent, and understand­s that more always can and should be done, with the greatest respect it does not accept the suggestion in the IC report that there are ‘systemic fails within the IAAF that prevent or diminish the possibilit­y of an effective anti-doping programme’.”

It also denied that corruption was widespread within the organisati­on.

UK ATHLETICS’ PLAN FOR THE MAIN CHANGES

* Wada to set up a global register for all drug tests or else UK Sport to do so for funded British athletes.

* Extend the time frame for the three-strikes system for missed tests from 18 months to two years.

* Crackdown on the controvers­ial use of therapeuti­c use exemptions.

* National federation­s to reimburse any prize-money lost by athletes as a result of a doping ban and annulment of results.

* All current athletics world records to be ripped up and for the record books to begin again.

* Increase doping bans to eight years for serious offences, with lifetime bans where appropriat­e.

* Supply and procuremen­t of performanc­e-enhancing drugs to be criminalis­ed. – The Independen­t

 ?? PICTURE: BACKPAGEPI­X ?? ON THE LOSING SIDE: Great Britain’s Paula Radcliffe will no longer be the holder of the Marathon world record if UKA has its way.
PICTURE: BACKPAGEPI­X ON THE LOSING SIDE: Great Britain’s Paula Radcliffe will no longer be the holder of the Marathon world record if UKA has its way.

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