David
Howman, Director General of WADA; Drugs in sport: WADA says doping and organized
crime 'too big to manage' | Sport | The Guardian
|
Young athletes could be
using performance-enhancing drugs as they try to make the breakthrough into
elite sport, fears World Anti-Doping Agency director general David Howman. Howman
also believes 10 percent of elite athletes could still be doping as WADA
continues its efforts to weed out drugs cheats and those that supply them with
illegal substances. Speaking
to the BBC, Howman said: "The area of most concern for us is the level of
young athletes who have not broken through into the elite who are trying to get
that breakthrough and are susceptible to taking drugs because that's a
shortcut.
Reuters report continues:
"Not
only are they susceptible to taking drugs, they are being encouraged to do so
by any one of a number of people that surround them -- coaches, trainers, even
parents -- because it's a way to make a lot of money."
While
elite athletes are routinely tested, Howman says teenagers competing in junior
events are "under the radar".
Howman,
who will step down in 2016 after 12 years at WADA, said research suggests that
despite improvements in some sports, namely cycling, doping is still too
prevalent.
"I
have great respect for the way in which the UCI (world cycling's governing
body) are now running their anti-doping programme," he told BBC's
Harttalk.
"We
have some guestimates based on some research undertaken over the last years.
"It's
far more than we would wish it to be -- over 10 percent. That is of concern
because those being caught by the system is far lower than that.
"Not
in all sports, in some sports."
Howman
said several top athletes were being investigated.
"Not to the same level
as the information we had on Lance Armstrong but certainly we have information
that is being investigated about a number of athletes around the world,"
he said.
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