The Scotsman

RFU defends scope of drug testing after publishing annual anti-doping report

- By MATT SLATER

The Rugby Football Union has defended its anti-doping programme despite being unable to guarantee that every Premiershi­p player is tested for performanc­e-enhancing drugs at least once a season.

According to the RFU’S antidoping and illicit drugs programme report for the 2017-18 season – which was published yesterday – there were 739 anti-doping tests conducted on profession­al players across the top two tiers of the English men’s game and top division in women’s rugby.

This represents an 18 percent increase on 2016-17 but more than 100 fewer tests than were conducted in 2015-16.

Nearly two thirds of those tests were carried out by UK Anti-doping (UKAD), with World Rugby doing most of the rest and European Profession­al Club Rugby and the Six Nations also doing some testing.

But, as with previous seasons, this does not mean every player with a club in England’s top men’s division is being tested at least once, every season, because there are nearly 500 players in the league – with another 150 in Premiershi­p academies – and several are tested multiple times.

Asked by reporters on a conference call to discuss the report, none of its authors were able to confirm that every Premiershi­p player had been tested last season, something many would consider to be the bare minimum for a game based on pace and power.

UKAD deputy director of operations Hamish Coffey said the RFU’S programme was “comprehens­ive but it’s not just about the numbers”, explaining that the testing was targeted for maximum effect and large sums of money were also spent on education.

RFU medical services director Dr Simon Kemp, who also chairs its anti-doping advisory group, said “no programme would have a hard and fast minimum number of tests”, while the manager of the RFU’S anti-doping and illicit programme Stephen Watkins claimed having a minimum requiremen­t would not have the same deterrence effect because it would be predictabl­e.

In terms of the numbers, those 739 tests resulted in only two violations: one was for Wasps player Ashley Johnson using a contaminat­ed supplement – for which he received a six-month ban – and the other was for Yorkshire Carnegie player Brandon Staples testing positive for steroids, the first such case in English pro rugby since 2011. Staples received a four-year ban.

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