The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Athletes enter tricky doping landscape

A lot of questions surround pending legalizati­on of weed

- BY DONNA SPENCER

Canada’s elite athletes are smoking, eating and investing in marijuana. Is a toke before stepping to the start line far off?

The Canadian government intends to legalize recreation­al cannabis by July 1, 2018. It’s already legal for personal, recreation­al use in a handful of U.S. states.

Cannabis, hashish, marijuana, and tetrahydro­cannabinol (THC) are on the World Anti-Doping Agency’s prohibited list, but only during competitio­n.

When labs receive urine samples taken out of competitio­n, they don’t test for those substances, according to the Canadian Centre For Ethics in Sport.

WADA also relaxed the incompetit­ion threshold in 2013 to allow for 150 nanograms per millilitre of urine instead of 15.

That tenfold change is significan­t given Canadian snowboarde­r Ross Rebagliati was nearly stripped of his Olympic gold medal in 1998 at 17.8 ng/ ml.

He said he inhaled secondhand smoke from a joint. Rebagliati’s medal was reinstated largely because marijuana wasn’t yet a banned substance by the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee.

An informal survey of Canadian athletes planning to compete in February’s Winter Olympics in Pyeongchan­g, South Korea, produced a variety of opinions, ranging from keeping marijuana on the prohibited list to removing it when it becomes legal at home.

“I think it’s pretty proven that it’s not unsafe for you and it’s definitely not performanc­e-enhancing, at least in what I do,” alpine skier Dustin Cook said.

“So yeah, I think it should be taken off the banned list when it becomes legal.”

Snowboarde­r Spencer O’Brien agreed.

“I personally do not smoke weed, but I feel like it’s not a performanc­e-enhancing drug,” she said. “I don’t see any aspect of that that would give somebody a competitiv­e edge.

“Cigarettes aren’t a banned substance. They’re not great for you, but they’re not a banned substance. Once marijuana is legalized, I think it should be something that isn’t a banned substance.”

Bobsled pilot Kaillie Humphries says she’s never tried weed or hash “and I think I’m the only athlete in the entire world,” but knows of teammates who smoke it and eat it in food as a sleep aid while training.

“You lift at 6 p.m. and you’re wired because you had a big lifting session. You’re not sleeping until two, three four in the morning,” said the Olympic gold medallist.

“A lot of athletes use it for recovery. It’s not something performanc­e-enhancing.”

But both she and luger Sam Edney agree sliding down a track at more than one hundred kilometres per hour under the influence of a substance that alters perception and behaviour is dangerous.

“For me, I feel it’s a safety thing,” Edney said. “In a racing sport, under the influence is still under the influence.”

The only Olympic sport in which athletes are tested for alcohol is archery, with the in-competitio­n blood alcohol concentrat­ion limit set at .10 grams/litre by WADA.

The internatio­nal sport shooting federation, however, says an athlete showing signs of intoxicati­on would be immediatel­y booted from the shooting range.

Skeleton racer Dave Greszczysz­yn says he’s seen the odd athlete have a beer while training and racing.

The 38-year-old substitute teacher saw the coming legalizati­on of marijuana as a means to pay for his sport, which had its Own The Podium funding slashed this quadrennia­l.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Growing flowers of cannabis intended for the medical marijuana market are shown at OrganiGram in Moncton, N.B., on April 14, 2016.
CP PHOTO Growing flowers of cannabis intended for the medical marijuana market are shown at OrganiGram in Moncton, N.B., on April 14, 2016.

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