Daily Mail

ENGLAND DOCTOR ACCUSED OVER FARAH INJECTION

- By MATT LAWTON and LAURA WILLIAMSON

ENGLAND Df football tb llt team doctor d t Robin Chakravert­y should be investigat­ed by the General Medical Council for failing to record details of a controvers­ial supplement he gave Mo Farah to ‘help performanc­e’ before the 2014 London Marathon, MPs have urged. A Digital, Culture, Media and Sport Committee report last night said it was ‘shocked’ to hear Chakravert­y, formerly chief medical officer at UK Athletics, had injected Farah with L-carnitine, which boosts testostero­ne levels, yet did not note down the dosage. The failure to record the drugs given to Farah in April 2014, as revealed by Sportsmail and the BBC, is comparable to Team Sky and British Cycling’s history of poor record-keeping with regard to Sir Bradley Wiggins, MPs said. UK Athletics, British Cycling and Team Sky have all been accused of ‘impeding’ the work of antidoping authoritie­s and making it ‘harder for clean athletes to clear their names’, according to the parliament­ary committee. UK Athletics is set to receive £26.9million of national Lottery and taxpayer funding in the run-up to the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo, while British Cycling will benefit to the tune of £29.6m. The committee also questioned why Farah was injected with L-carnitine before the 2014 London Marathon to enhance his ‘own advantage rather than working on athletic prowess’. The report states Dr Chakravert­y had never before administer­ed the supplement, which is legal if an athlete receives a maximum of 50 millilitre­s every six hours, and it was the first time Farah had ever been given the substance. Chakravert­y, the ‘lead men’s performanc­e doctor’ for Gareth Southgate’s England footballer­s, told the committee he gave Farah 2.7ml via injection ‘to help performanc­e’ ahead of his full marathon debut. The doctor attributed his poor recordkeep­ing to being the only full-time member of staff and being ‘constantly on call’ for 140 athletes. Last May, a leaked report from US Anti-Doping authoritie­s into Farah’s then coach Alberto Salazar found the American used a banned method of administer­ing L-carnitine to some of his athletes. Farah, 34, has categorica­lly denied using banned substances, but his use of three supplement­s — nasal calcitonin, a nasal spray to help reduce stress fractures, ‘particular­ly high’ doses of Vitamin D and iron — during a summer 2011 training camp overseen by Salazar were also examined by the committee. Ed Warner, former chair of UK Athletics, told the committee his organisati­on’s failure to keep proper medical records was ‘inexcusabl­e’ but has improved in recent years. He added: ‘Please do not tar us with the same brush.’ The report said: ‘The failure to keep proper records for the drugs given to Mo Farah draws an instant comparison with the issues we have previously investigat­ed relating to Team Sky and British Cycling. We believe that the General Medical Council should investigat­e any incident where doctors working in sport have failed to properly record the medicines they are supplying to their athletes.’ The FA last night stood by Dr Charkraver­ty, saying they are happy he has fully complied with the DCMS investigat­ion.

 ??  ?? Doc in the dock: the failure of Robin Chakravert­y (right) to record the dosage of L-carnitine he gave to Farah must be investigat­ed
Doc in the dock: the failure of Robin Chakravert­y (right) to record the dosage of L-carnitine he gave to Farah must be investigat­ed
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom