RBSC

Collapse

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

WADA PR machine comes out swinging...Jamaica sponsors

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • #31
    Lax drug-testing policy hurts legitimacy of Jamaican track a

    Victor Conte: Lax drug-testing policy hurts legitimacy of Jamaican track and field

    According to the USADA’s web site there were 2,279 tests performed on U.S. track and field athletes in 2012. JADCO, meanwhile, performed a mere 106 tests, of which 68 were performed out of competition.

    Comments (1)
    BY VICTOR CONTE / NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

    SATURDAY, AUGUST 3, 2013, 6:50 PM

    PAUL SAKUMA/AP

    Victor Conte lashes out against Jamaica's anti-doping program, specifically JADCO's chairman, Dr. Herb Elliott.
    RELATED STORIES
    American sprinter Tyson Gay tests positive for banned substance
    Prince Harry runs with Olympic champ Usain Bolt during visit to Jamaica
    Lance Armstrong's drug ban nixes any return to NYC Marathon as cyclist cannot register for race
    Nadzeya Ostapchuk, shot putter from Belarus, is first Olympian to have gold medal withdrawn for doping

    An open letter about the Jamaican Anti-Doping Commission’s ineptness and lack of transparency.

    My primary concern with Jamaica’s anti-doping program has been its lack of transparency. I have openly and repeatedly criticized JADCO for not routinely providing annual drug testing statistics. Many of the world’s anti-doping programs under the guidance of the WADA code do provide annual testing statistics and for good reason.

    In my opinion, JADCO’s chairman, Dr. Herb Elliott, has provided poor leadership during the last five years since the organization’s inception. Only after the recent rash of positive drug tests, including those on Jamaican Olympic sprinters Asafa Powell and Sharone Simpson, has some partial drug testing data been released to the public.

    In mid-July, when Dr. Elliott was asked how many out-of-competition tests had taken place in 2013, he failed to provide a clear answer, responding with, “I don’t want our athletes to know whether it’s 400 or 500 or whatever.”

    Interestingly, The Gleaner reported on July 29 that Prime Minister Portia Simpson Miller had revealed that since 2009, there have been 16 adverse analytical findings among Jamaican athletes. She also revealed that during the last five years, a total of 860 tests have been conducted by JADCO with 504 tests conducted in competition and 356 tests conducted out of competition.

    Unless all 356 out-of-competition tests reported were conducted in 2013, it seems that Dr. Elliott may have provided some rather misleading information.

    (I consider in-competition drug tests to be more IQ tests than drug tests because athletes can simply taper off before competitions and easily avoid testing positive. I believe that random out-of-competition tests are a far more effective use of the available resources.)

    On July 30, WADA released its annual anti-doping report, which indicated JADCO had performed a mere 106 anti-doping tests in all of 2012, of which 68 were performed out of competition.

    RELATED: THE SCORE HEARS: BROADWAY BOMBERS


    WILLIAM WEST/AFP/GETTY IMAGES

    Jamaican runner Asafa Powell (l.) tests positive for the stimulant oxilofrine last month.

    To put this into perspective, WADA reported that the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency performed 4,051 tests in 2012.

    According to The Gleaner, Dr. Elliott’s response was that the 106 tests conducted by Jamaica were primarily of track and field athletes, calling it “adequate” for its population. At major championships, whether a country’s population is 3 million or 300 million, each country is allowed up to three male and three female athletes for each of the 25 track and field events.

    Over the last five years, Jamaica’s major championship track and field teams have averaged about 50 athletes compared to 150 for the United States.

    According to USADA’s web site there were 2,279 tests performed on U.S. track and field athletes in 2012. Even if all 106 tests performed in 2012 by JADCO were on track and field athletes, this cannot be considered adequate testing in comparison with the U. S. and many other nations competing at the Olympic Games.

    I also believe that it is important for anti-doping commissions to report the number of “missed tests.” Under the WADA code athletes are allowed to miss two tests in any given 18-month period without being subjected to doping charges. Many countries’ anti-doping programs provide statistics for “missed tests” on an annual basis. How many “missed tests” has JADCO had in each of the last five years? If this information has been reported, I have not been able to find it. Once more, I consider these to be important details that Dr. Elliott has failed to disclose.

    The sudden rise to world dominance by numerous male and female Jamaican sprinters, coupled with such a significant number of positive drug tests, is highly suspicious in my opinion. I also think JADCO’s lack of drug testing transparency over the last five years has contributed to the cloud of doubt that exists regarding the legitimacy of their many astonishing performances.

    Victor Conte was the founder of BALCO, the Bay Area lab at the center of the government’s investigation into performance-enhancing drugs. He pleaded guilty to conspiracy to distribute steroids in 2005. He is now a staunch anti-doping advocate.

    SAY WHAT?
    “Ultimately, every team has to have a quarterback. I think we have the best in the league.”

    — Chiefs OC Doug Pederson on Alex Smith


    Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/sports/mo...#ixzz2b20f4mkl
    Winning means you're willing to go longer, work harder, and give more than anyone else - Vince Lombardi

    Comment


    • #32
      Drugbuster Pound says doping is so widespread that he no longer has faith in sport at the top

      By Nick Harris
      PUBLISHED: 16:03 EST, 3 August 2013 | UPDATED: 16:03 EST, 3 August 2013 132 shares
      3
      View
      comments

      Dick Pound, the former head of the World Anti-Doping Agency, has admitted that the widespread use of performance-enhancing drugs in sport has forced him to question 'everything I see'.

      Pound, a 71-year-old Canadian lawyer, was founding chairman of WADA and is a former president of the agency, as well as a senior member of the International Olympic Committee.

      He also co-authored an authoritative WADA report, published in May, laying out in detail why anti-doping programmes around the world are so ineffective.


      Secrecy: Tennis chiefs won't say if Marin Cilic failed a test

      Last week, in the wake of the publication of WADA's global review of drug tests by sport, nation and laboratory, Pound told The Mail on Sunday: 'I certainly question everything I see now, in all sports.

      'It's pretty clear just from the numbers of people being caught that drug use is rampant, and it's rampant at the top end of sports.

      'This isn't people ranked at No 300 taking drugs to boost them up the rankings, it's the people at the top who have used drugs to get there. I believe it's happening across sports. It's clear that cycling, athletics, swimming, tennis and soccer have major problems and are ruled by governing bodies in denial.'

      WADA's review of global testing for 2012 revealed that almost 300,000 samples from all sports were analysed by accredited laboratories, with 1.19 per cent of them testing positive for banned substances.

      This figure rose to almost two per cent when 'atypical' findings - those which were abnormal but not illegal - were included. There are huge variations between the number of tests by sport and country.
      Jamaica's anti-doping commission performed only 106 tests in 2012, against 4,051 by the anti-doping agency in the US, 5,971 in Britain (plus almost 10,000 at the Olympics and Paralympics), 15,854 in Russia and 10,066 in China.
      Rates of positive tests varied from 0.34 per cent in China to 3.34 per cent in India. Britain had 0.74 per cent positives, France 1.97 per cent and Belgium 2.05 per cent.


      Lost faith: World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) president Dick Pound

      The WADA figures have been made public as athletics reels from the recent failed drugs tests by Jamaica's former 100metres world record-holder, Asafa Powell, and America's former world champion, Tyson Gay - and as Moscow prepares to host the World Championships this month.

      Turkish athletics is enduring its own shame as the chairman of the national track and field federation, Mehmet Terzi, resigned on Thursday after nine Turkish athletes, including two teenagers, were handed two-year bans for using anabolic steroids.

      Terzi's resignation is seen as an attempt to help Istanbul's case as it bids against Tokyo and Madrid to stage the 2020 Olympics.

      Cycling remains mired in drugs controversy as debate rages over the future of the world governing body, the UCI, while tennis is in the spotlight for its refusal even to confirm a suspected drugs ban for world No 15 Marin Cilic.
      Pound is unequivocal in his belief that the top echelons of most sports are riddled with drugs and points to the fact that Lance Armstrong could pass around 300 drug tests as proof that dopers are beating the system.

      Even in a supposedly new, clean era, Pound says he will not watch the Tour de France until the sport's administration, which has historically turned a blind eye to doping, is reformed.
      'As an event, I don't believe what I see,' said Pound. 'We've been there, done that and until there's a change of attitude at the very top [in the UCI] then I won't watch it.'
      He is similarly sceptical about most other major sports.


      Caught: Jamaica's Asafa Powell failed a test

      'In athletics, you've seen Powell and Gay get caught. Top sprinters are getting caught left, right and centre. Are they catching all of them? Clearly not.'

      Of tennis, Pound adds: 'When you look back at the era of McEnroe and Connors, in their prime they looked like little old men compared to the brutes now, thrashing around for four hours with a force and intensity that's ridiculous. Has tennis got a problem? Of course it has.'

      Pound says that during his time as WADA chairman between 1999-2008, he wrote to the commissioners of all America's major sports, asking how WADA could help in the fight against drugs.

      He says he got a dismissive response from each of them.

      'Baseball was one of the leading organisations of denial,' he says. 'Their attitude was basically "**** off, kid. We don't have a problem. Why don't you mind your own business?"'

      Pound's report for WADA in May concluded that 'there is no general appetite [in sport] to undertake the effort and expense of a successful effort to deliver doping-free sport'.

      He said this is because exposing dopers is bad for business and the lack of appetite to tackle doping 'applies at the level of athletes, international sport organisations, national Olympic committees, anti-doping organisations and governments.'

      He added: 'Governing bodies should be cleaning up sport but aren't. The reason WADA exists is because they weren't doing their job properly . . . and they still aren't.'
      So, who’s winning the fight against the drug cheats ... and who’s still lagging behind?















      Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/oth...#ixzz2b26CPimq
      Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
      THERE IS ONLY ONE ONANDI LOWE!

      "Good things come out of the garrisons" after his daughter won the 100m Gold For Jamaica.


      "It therefore is useless and pointless, unless it is for share malice and victimisation to arrest and charge a 92-year-old man for such a simple offence. There is nothing morally wrong with this man smoking a spliff; the only thing wrong is that it is still on the law books," said Chevannes.

      Comment

      Working...
      X