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  • Mullings confident he will clear his name of drug cheating

    Mullings confident he will clear his name of drug cheating
    Unperturbed!

    BY PAUL A REID Observer writer

    Saturday, August 13, 2011






    EMBATTLED Jamaican sprinter Steve Mullings is confident he will be cleared of drug cheating charges as allegations swirl after he returned an Adverse Analytical Finding at the JAAA/Supreme Ventures National Senior Trials June 23-26.

    While explaining he was not allowed to speak to the media yet, when contacted in Florida by the Observer yesterday, the 28-year-old expressed confidence his name would be cleared and he would be able to continue competing.


    MULLINGS… expressed confidence his name would be cleared and he would be able to continue competing

    MULLINGS… expressed confidence his name would be cleared and he would be able to continue competing 1/1


    News of the failed drug test broke on Wednesday, two days after Mullings was notified of the finding and after initially denying that his client was involved, Britain-based track and field agent John Regis on Thursday evening confirmed that the former Vere Technical, Barton County and Mississippi State athlete had returned a tainted urine sample at the JAAA/Supreme Ventures National Senior Trials.

    Regis was heard on a television interview Thursday night confirming that the Florida-based Mullings had been notified earlier this week and while refusing to go into any details said they would be contesting the findings.

    On Thursday, a release from the Jamaica Anti-Doping Commission (JADCO) confirmed that they had "received an Adverse Analytical Finding (AAF) from a sample collected at the Jamaica National Trials on June 24, 2011" the night of the 100m final where he finished third behind Asafa Powell and Yohan Blake.

    Mullings, who ran seven sub-10-second timing this season, including his personal best 9.80 seconds, third best this year behind Asafa Powell and Tyson Gay, his American training partner, also won the 200m at Trials and was expected in some quarters to leave the 13th IAAF World Championships in Daegu with up to three medals.

    Mullings was fifth in the 200m final two years ago at the IAAF World Championships in Berlin and was on the 4x100m relay team that won gold and also won silver in 2007 in Osaka, Japan as part of the relay team.

    Meanwhile, it is unlikely that given the time frame that Mullings will be named on the Jamaica squad for Daegu.

    The final list of athletes must be submitted to the IAAF by midnight Central European time on Monday, August 19, and it is understood that Mullings' B sample will be tested a day later on Tuesday at the IAAF/WADA-accredited lab in Montreal, Canada.

    Under IAAF and JAAA rules, the athlete is provisionally suspended until he/she is cleared by the national governing body and the IAAF.

    If Mullings is unable to compete, his places would be taken by Nesta Carter in the 100m and Marvin Anderson in the 200m, while Dexter Lee would move up a place in the relay pool.

    Carter was fourth in the 100m and Anderson fourth in the 200m, while Lee in his first season as a senior, was sixth in the 100m final but would move up to fifth position.



    Read more: http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/sport...#ixzz1UvawRvwk
    Solidarity is not a matter of well wishing, but is sharing the very same fate whether in victory or in death.
    Che Guevara.

  • #2
    Furosemide is the banned drug — report
    By PAUL A REID Observer writer

    Saturday, August 13, 2011








    Furosemide has been identified as the drug that was found in Jamaican athlete Steve Mullings' urine sample taken at the JAAA/Supreme Ventures National Senior Trials in late June.

    An article carried in the British newspaper The Telegraph yesterday, identified the substance as Furosemide and described it as "a masking agent abused by some athletes to cover up steroid and stimulant use".

    Neither the athlete, his agent John Regis nor the Jamaica Anti-Doping Commission (JADCO), who confirmed the finding on Thursday, has commented on the substance, however.

    According to Medicinenet.com, Furosemide, which is dispensed under the brand name 'Lasix' is "a potent diuretic (water pill) that is used to eliminate water and salt from the body. In the kidneys, salt (composed of sodium and chloride), water, and other small molecules normally are filtered out of the blood and into the tubules of the kidney. The filtered fluid ultimately becomes urine".

    According to the website, the drug that was approved by the Federal Drug Administration (FDA) in 1982 and is mostly used "to treat excessive accumulation of fluid and/or swelling (oedema) of the body caused by heart failure, cirrhosis, chronic kidney failure, and the nephrotic syndrome. It is sometimes used alone or in conjunction with other blood pressure pills to treat high blood pressure".

    Mullings suffers from chronic asthma and according to the livestrong.com website, Furosemide under the Lasix brand has been known to be prescribed by some doctors to treat the condition.

    "Doctors are allowed to prescribe legal medications for health conditions even if the US Food and Drug Administration has not approved the drug for that particular condition. Oral furosemide is used off-label to treat and prevent asthma symptoms by inducing airway smooth muscle relaxation, preventing inflammation and increasing airway and lung hormone levels, explains the 2006 book The Guide to Off-Label Prescription Drugs by Kevin Loughlin and Joyce Generali. Furosemide is useful for chronic asthma as well as asthma triggered by exercise, cold air and chemical sensitivities."



    Read more: http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/sport...#ixzz1UvbiU000
    Solidarity is not a matter of well wishing, but is sharing the very same fate whether in victory or in death.
    Che Guevara.

    Comment


    • #3
      gosh, the man has chronic asthma. leave him alone!


      BLACK LIVES MATTER

      Comment


      • #4
        he he he..I remember when JJK used to suck on her pump in between jumps and us Jamaicans were up in arms that she was doping up right infront of the officials.

        We used to snicker about those asthmatic Americans.

        Antonique Campbell who used to go to Herbert Morrison has chronic asthma as well and she has passed out and had to be taken to hospitals several times especially after running a hard 400m race.

        She was on Salbuterol (sic?) while it was banned susbstance on the IAAF/WADA list but at least she had a medical exemption for it
        Solidarity is not a matter of well wishing, but is sharing the very same fate whether in victory or in death.
        Che Guevara.

        Comment


        • #5
          Hold on...no this women use for water retention at certain times? Better him did drink beer or tea....

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