Pubdate: Tue, 06 Nov 2001 Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Copyright: 2001 San Jose Mercury News Contact: http://www.sjmercury.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/390 Author: Andrew Bridges (AP) UCLA LAB TO TEST OLYMPIANS Anti-Doping Crew Aims To Keep Winter Games Drug-Free LOS ANGELES -- Employees of a University of California-Los Angeles laboratory are gearing up for the 2002 Winter Olympics, where they will conduct all of the urine testing intended to keep the games honest. Some 35 of the UCLA Olympic Analytical Laboratory's employees -- a group as international as the athletes it tests -- soon will travel to Salt Lake City. They will begin work Jan. 29 adjacent to the Olympic Village. "There are very few people who disagree with the statement, 'Sport ought to be clean,' " said Dr. Don Catlin, director of the 20-year-old UCLA lab. "The reality is, it isn't. And somebody has to do the work to keep it clean." Already, drug-testing supplies, including millions of dollars' worth of scientific equipment, are being stockpiled at the lab just off Olympic Boulevard in West Los Angeles. The laboratory is one of two dozen anti-doping facilities accredited by the International Olympic Committee, but the only one in the United States. As such, it will do all of the drug-testing work at the winter Olympiad under a $3.5 million contract. Nearly all of the 2,500 athletes competing will be tested before the games begin. Another 800 will be tested again during competition by the UCLA lab, their urine anonymously screened for nearly 400 substances banned by the IOC. Cross-country skiers, biathletes, Nordic combined athletes and long-track speed skaters also will undergo newly instituted testing for erythropoietin, or EPO, a hormone that boosts production of red blood cells that carry oxygen to the muscles. Doping is less prevalent in winter sports: Experts predict just 1 percent to 2 percent of athletes will test positive, or about half the rate of summer Olympians. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth