Source: International Herald-Tribune Copyright: International Herald Tribune 1999 Website: http://www.iht.com/ Contact: Jan 20, 1999 Copyright: International Herald Tribune 1999 Author: Christopher Clarey, International Herald Tribune COURIER HAS SUSPICIONS ON DRUGS MELBOURNE---Jim Courier said Tuesday after winning his first-round match at the Australian Open that he believed the biggest drug problem in tennis was not the sort of steroids that were found in Petr Korda's body but the use of endurance-boosting substances like EPO, the substance that was at the heart of the Tour de France scandal last July. "I don't think strength is the answer in tennis," Courier said. "I mean, it's a component for sure, but if brute strength were the answer we would all be weightlifters in the locker room, which is not the case. "Steroids definitely have a place in coming back from injuries. They definitely increase your capacity to train. But l'm much more inclined to have concern for something we cannot test for under the current system of testing." Courier added: "I can't name names, but I see a lot of guys playing a lot of weeks in a row and jumping around fresh and crazy and knowing that it's undetectable in our tests. I'd say there's too much money at stake for people not to be taking advantage." Courier said he found it particularly suspicious that players were able. to keep playing week after week on clay. "I hope it's not the case that these drugs are widespread," he said. "I hope the guys are better athletes than I am and are able to push their bodies on a week to week basis. But I know what I'm capable of and I know what I push my body to do, and I just don't see a lot of it as humanly possible. On clay, every match is a war, and they are playing every week and winning, 6-2, 6-2, in two hours. How do you keep doing that and stay fresh?'' There is now no reliable test for EPO, the artificial hormone that increases the flow of oxygen to muscles, but skiers and cyclists now undergo frequent blood testing before competition to determine their red blood cell counts. In cases where those counts exceed a pre-established level, they are not allowed to race. According to Todd Martin, the ATP Tour is considering using blood testing as a complement but not a replacement for urinalysis. But Martin and several other players distanced themselves from Courier's speculative comments about the provalence of EPO and blood doping. which involves the removal and reinjection of blood into an athlete. "I have absolutely no knowledge of anyone blood doping whatsoever; and I'm darned sure I'm not going to find myself sitting in a position where I speculate on such an intense and serious matter," Andre Agassi said. "When it comes to the health of tennis, we don't need guesses." Thomas Muster, who like Agassi and Courier was once ranked No. 1, said: "I think we are pretty much on the edge of destroying the sport by making comments like that. If you don't have proof, you shouldn't say things like this." - --- MAP posted-by: Joel W. Johnson