Business Day

Athletes beat tests with micro-dosing

- SEBASTIAN FEST London

FORGET sophistica­ted, powerful steroids: when it comes to doping these days, the new trend rests on micro-dosing.

“Smaller amounts are being taken in the hope that they will be undetectab­le,” says David Howman, director-general of the World Anti-Doping Agency.

Victor Conte, the man behind the Balco scandal that landed former star athlete Marion Jones in jail and in disgrace, agrees.

“I don’t believe they’re using designer steroids these days. I believe they’re using fast-acting testostero­ne,” Conte recently told the San Francisco Chronicle.

“You can micro-dose, you can use fast-acting creams and gels and patches,” he said.

Howman largely agrees, even if he praises the anti-doping programme in place at the London Games, where even the cleaning staff have orders to report any suspicious substances or wrapping they find in the rooms.

“The Internatio­nal Olympics Committee have got a very good programme in place,” he says.

“What you have to rely on is the ethics.... If the athletes come and they’re responsibl­e, and they come clean, it will be a great games. If they try to cheat, hopefully they’ll be caught.”

Asked how performanc­eenhancing drugs are currently taken, New Zealander Howman answers not unlike Conte.

“There are sophistica­tions — not the substances themselves, it’s the amount that they’re taking,” Howman says. “So you have to adjust the process of analysis to ensure you combat that.”

The other challenge is “substances that are produced naturally”, such as testostero­ne and the human growth hormone.

“They’re hard to detect anyway, so you’ve got to tell the scientists, think like the cheaters so that you can detect what the cheaters are doing. And that means microdosin­g, that means, make sure you use the best machinery to test the samples,” he says.

With micro-dosing, “what you are doing is taking a small amount to give you a little bit extra for the event, and then hopefully it will go through your body so that by the time you finish the event it won’t come out in your urine or your blood. That’s what they hope.”

Conte, who founded the infamous Balco lab and now leads the Scientific Nutrition for Advanced Conditioni­ng, gives more details.

According to the Chronicle, Conte’s contacts in the underworld of doping tell him that US baseball players are now taking fast-acting synthetic testostero­ne, which is less powerful but is easily flushable from the system.

Conte said he did not understand the obsession with testing during the games, which he finds unnecessar­y. More than 6,400 doping tests are set to be done.

“(The time) you build your explosive strength and speed and power base is October, November, December,” he said.

“You need to stick your hook and line and pole in the pond during this time frame. I know, because I was preparing people this way.”

Steeplecha­ser Angel Mullera is to be reinstated to Spain’s Olympic team after partly winning an appeal against his exclusion due to a doping investigat­ion, the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport ruled.

“The decision to exclude the athlete from the 2012 Olympic Games shall be set aside and the Spanish athletics federation and the Spanish Olympic Committee shall confirm his selection in the Spanish Olympic team,” the ad hoc division said on its website yesterday. Sapa-DPA, Reuters

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