Pubdate: Mon, 23 Aug 1999 Source: Irish Independent (Ireland) Copyright: Independent Newspapers (Ireland) Ltd Contact: http://www.independent.ie/ Author: Eilish O'Hanlon, Health Correspondent DRUG TESTS IN ALL SPORTS WILL START IN OCTOBER DRUG testing of Irish athletes and other sports participants is expected to begin in October, chief executive of the Sports Council, John Treacy, confirmed yesterday. The introduction of the testing was delayed until the Sports Council was set up on a statutory basis, giving it the legal power to carry out the tests. The testing will not be confined to elite athletes alone but will also involve other sports people involved in a range of games, including GAA, soccer and rugby. The former top athlete said the Council has been put on a statutory footing since the beginning of last month and it has already put a tendering process in place for the accredited laboratory which will carry out the tests. ``We have tendered for the sampling company and we are to finalise that contract. We have also tendered for the transport company to take the samples to the laboratory,'' he added. The volume of tests conducted on Irish athletes would not justify setting up a special laboratory and we will not be unique in sending the samples abroad, he pointed out. He said certain sports are already ready for the testing and the initial priority will be the sports competitors who are in receipt of State grants. The sports federations have to ensure that their Constitutions legally allow for the testing. Those who fail to comply will get no funds from the State. It is envisaged that around 600 urine tests will be carried out within the first year. Workshops are to be conducted with sports national governing bodies and athletes in October. However, it will be a matter for the national government bodies to determine the level of sanction imposed on those found guilty suspensions could range from six months to four years. The Sports Council will have overall power to take action in the form of withdrawal of funding if it feels that a governing body has failed in its duty to take sanction against an athlete who has breached the rules. The need for better education about banned substances, which can be innocently found in the system after taking over-the-counter medications, is seen as crucial for those involved in sports currently not subject to testing. The issue of drug testing in sport has come to the fore again with the withdrawal of Merlene Ottey from the world championships which opened in Spain over the weekend. Ottey, who tested positive but has denied taking drugs, has been found to have nandrolone in her system, the same steroid featured in the cases of Linford Christie, Dougie Walker and Gary Cadogan. Nandrolone has featured in so many cases this year that Sport UK, the British equivalent of the Irish Sports Council, has been forced to launch an investigation. There are widespread fears that the spate of positive tests are the result of athletes taking over-the-counter food supplements containing substances which can produce metabolites of nandrolone. Dr Brendan Buckley, chemical pathologist at Mercy Hospital, Cork, said since out-of-competition testing was introduced in 1988, a substantial reduction in distances has been achieved by shot putt, javelin and discus throwers. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea