23 Chinese swimmers tested positive for banned substance before 2021 Olympics:


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WADA confirmed in a statement released on Saturday that 23 Chinese swimmers tested positive for trimetazidine, or TMZ, a performance-enhancing drug, in early 2021. The agency also pushed back against what it called “misleading and potentially defamatory media coverage,” in response to media reports alleging that the agency had dismissed the positive results.

The New York Times and the Daily Telegraph both reported on the positive tests on Saturday. The Times reported that there was no public disclosure at the time of the positive tests and no suspensions for the swimmers, who it said made up nearly half of the team China sent to the Tokyo Games and in some cases won medals.

WADA said that the China Anti-Doping Agency (CHINADA) notified them in June 2021 of its decision to accept that the swimmers tested positive “after inadvertently being exposed to the substance through contamination.” WADA said it then spent weeks reviewing CHINADA’s decision and the contamination theory.

“As part of its review, WADA collected additional, unpublished scientific information on TMZ and consulted with independent scientific experts to test the contamination theory and also whether low doses of TMZ could have benefited the athletes during a swimming competition event,” WADA said.

WADA said its investigators were unable to go to China due to COVID-19 restrictions and that they “ultimately concluded that it was not in a position to disprove the possibility that contamination was the source of TMZ and it was compatible with the analytical data in the file.”

“WADA also concluded that, given the specific circumstances of the asserted contamination, the athletes would be held to have no fault or negligence,” the agency said. “As such, and based on the advice of external counsel, WADA considered that an appeal was not warranted.”

Olivier Rabin, the senior director of science and medicine for WADA, said in a statement that the contamination scenario was supported by the “consistently low concentrations as well as no doping pattern.”

WADA Intelligence and Investigations director Gunter Younger said the threshold to open an investigation was not met “based on the available information and a lack of any credible evidence.”

“At every stage, WADA I&I followed all due process and diligently investigated every lead and line of enquiry in this matter,” Younger said in a statement.

WADA informed the International Testing Agency, a Switzerland-based anti-doping group that provides independent oversight of international sports competition, according to Rabin.

International Testing…



Read More: 23 Chinese swimmers tested positive for banned substance before 2021 Olympics: 2024-04-20 19:14:47

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