99 meldonium cases this year, says World Anti-Doping Agency

99 meldonium cases this year, says World Anti-Doping Agency

March 12, 2016
99 meldonium cases this year, says World Anti-Doping Agency
99 meldonium cases this year, says World Anti-Doping Agency

MOSCOW — There have been 99 positive tests this year for meldonium, the drug found in Maria Sharapova's sample at the Australian Open, the World Anti-Doping Agency said Friday.

WADA spokesman Ben Nichols told the Associated Press in an e-mail that since the drug was banned on Jan. 1 "there have been 99 adverse analytical findings for Meldonium recorded." Nichols did not provide details of who has tested positive.

Meldonium, a blood-flow boosting drug produced in Latvia, is most common in Eastern European and former Soviet countries, where it is often available over the counter.

Seven of the 16 confirmed cases come from Russian athletes, including Sharapova, who admitted she had tested positive Monday at a news conference. Sharapova said she has been taking meldonium for 10 years for various health issues and did not know it had been banned. Other cases involve athletes from Ukraine, Georgia and Sweden.

Athletes who fail doping tests can face a ban of up to four years for a first offense, but substantial reductions can be imposed if they demonstrate that they did not intend to enhance their performance.

Sharapova is one of four Olympic medalists to have tested positive for meldonium. The others are Russian speedskater Semyon Elistratov, Russian ice dancer Ekaterina Bobrova and Georgian wrestler Davit Modzmanashvili.

WADA announced in September that meldonium, which was once used to help boost the endurance of Soviet troops, would be banned from 2016, citing evidence of the drug's performance-enhancing benefits and widespread use in international sports.

Since Sharapova announced that she tested positive, WADA has been criticized by the Russian government. Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Thursday that meldonium should never have been banned, arguing that it doesn't enhance performance.

"In recent days there has been no limit at all to comments from specialists, including the inventor of this substance," Lavrov told Russia's Ren TV. "They clearly and professionally explain that it isn't doping at all but a normal method for supporting the body and its basic functions."

Two Russian rugby players found to have taken meldonium

Two unnamed Russians who play for the national women's and men's sevens teams have been found to have taken the banned substance meldonium, the Russian Rugby Federation (RRF) said in a statement Friday.

"A player from the men's rugby sevens national team admitted the results from his A sample and rejected the opportunity to test his B sample," the RRF added.

"A sportswoman from the women's rugby sevens team says she has not taken any illegal substances and has asked for her B sample to be tested."


March 12, 2016
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