England: Drug checks in players' homes (26 Oct 1997)
CRICKETERS are facing the prospect of being randomly tested for prohibited drugs away from the county grounds and even in their own homes
26-Oct-1997
26 October 1997
Drug checks in players' homes
By Paul Newman
CRICKETERS are facing the prospect of being randomly tested for
prohibited drugs away from the county grounds and even in their
own homes.
The move is one of several being considered by the England and
Wales Cricket Board to tighten up their testing procedures in
the light of the Phil Tufnell case. The England spinner was
fined £1,000 and had an 18-month ban suspended when his word
that he had "forgotten" to take a test during Middlesex's final
championship match against Essex was accepted by an ECB
disciplinary committee.
"Extended testing is something we're looking at," said Tim Lamb,
the ECB chief executive. "We're convinced there is no drug
problem in cricket but we must make sure we are not complacent."
Whether the move would include the close season is unclear.
Matthew Fleming of the Professional Cricketers' Association, who
have been holding talks with the ECB about the situation, points
out that players are not under contract between October and
April, so are not then answerable to their clubs.
The International Cricket Council would also like to introduce
testing
during Test series, surprisingly absent at the moment, but are
worried that many of the nine Test playing countries do not have
adequate facilities.
"That is something that could hinder us if we tested out of
season too," said Lamb. "There are very few IOC [International
Olympic Committee] approved laboratories and we wouldn't want to
get involved in a case like that of Diane Modahl in athletics."
Modahl questioned the positive results of a random test in
Portugal and was cleared after a lengthy battle.
The Sports Council are happy that their testers carried out
their duties properly in the Tufnell case but Lamb is adamant
that there will not be another case of a player forgetting to
provide a sample when picked.
"We have not set a precedent," he said. "Players must not think
that they can just miss a test and get away with it. People have
said that Phil has been treated leniently but I don't think
that's the case."
Tufnell now faces the prospect of Sports Council testers turning
up at his Essex home unannounced some time between now and
departure for the West Indies early in the New Year. He will
also be randomly tested in 1998.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)