TV documentary to name drug shame playersBy Matt Lawton UPDATED: 00:07, 12 September 2011 Share ..Dozens of English professional footballers will be named and shamed on Monday night for failing out-of-competition drug tests that have never been made public by the FA. One player who will be exposed in Channel 4âs Dispatches completed a âmulti-million-poundâ transfer without the buying club knowing he had tested positive for cocaine. None of those named have failed tests for what would be considered performance-enhancing drugs. But, dating back to 2003, the UK anti-doping agency have caught up to 43 professional footballers using cocaine, ecstasy or cannabis in out-of-competition testing. The programme also makes much of 240 âabandonedâ tests between April 2007 and August 2010, with testers arriving at training grounds to discover that the players targeted were not there. But these cases are not comparable with the Rio Ferdinand episode, as the clubs and players would not have known the testers were coming on that day. The FA will wait to see the programme before responding but last night Wembley officials were understood to be disappointed because they consider their testing to be more extensive than in any other sport in the country. Testing positive: Adrian Mutu, then of Chelsea, accepted a positive test for cocaine in 2004 Football pays for more than 60 per cent of tests on athletes in the UK, and their policy of protecting the identity of players who fail out-of-competition tests for recreational drugs is not in breach of any World Anti-Doping Agency regulations. WADA donât even demand that athletes are tested out of competition for recreational drugs. Those who fail tests for these sorts of drugs in competition are named by the FA. But the policy of protecting those exposed this evening â the FA consider it better to treat and educate them privately â is questioned by the head of WADA, David Howman. Asked whether the FA should disclose how many players are tested or how many tests take place, he replied: âThe answer to that is why not? If you donât then you are susceptible to an allegation that youâre hiding something. âTheyâre saying they havenât got a doping problem because there are not many positive tests. I think the answer to that is: donât we need to conduct better research to see what the prevalence of doping is? Until we are satisfied by the use of all the gathering of evidence I donât think weâre in a position to say (there is not a drug problem in English football).â The programme also features a former member of Chelseaâs staff criticising the use of intravenous iron infusions and reveals evidence of former Chelsea and Manchester United doctors attending a clinic which uses Actovegin â a treatment made from calfâs blood not licensed in North America but permitted in Europe. It is not on WADAâs banned list. In a statement to Dispatches, the FA said: âThe FA operates a comprehensive anti-doping programme which is the largest of any sport in the UK. The FA go beyond the WADA Code by proactively testing all samples for social drugs, irrespective of whether the tests are conducted in or out of competition.â http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/fo...mentary-drug-shame-players.html#ixzz290U4ja1v Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
I wonder if that might be someone who's recently retired from football despite only joining a club a couple of weeks earlier, only I remember said player completing a transfer with the selling manager saying the buying club would soon know the full story about the player. I'll avoid naming him because I'm pretty sure after being paid £45k/wk in the Championship for a season that Bullard can afford better lawyers than me. Oh **** I've done it now
lol I hope you understand, I've just had to call you a ****ing useless cockney on our forum for that. I wouldn't normally, but it was that or call myself a ****ing useless northern monkey for not noticing myself when I copied this thread, and I'm not accepting the blame for this if I can avoid it.
Wasn't trying to be clever but just thought it was worthwhile spelling it out for you how you have been coming across of late, i will leave you to your reasons as you may genuinely have problems outside of here I don't know about
Always thought there was a whole lot of doping going on. Check Fat Frank and JT's hair, notice the similarity? Check Van Nistelroy's jaw. "He" makes the signs clear for those who wish to see them...