“These will be the most tested Games in Olympic
history and doping athletes must know that they will be under severe
scrutiny of anti-doping officials from the moment they set foot in the
Olympic Village,” WADA president John Fahey said.
“The IOC and LOCOG (Games organising committee) have
prepared an extensive anti-doping programme that will analyse up to
6,250 samples while the anti-doping authorities are already sharing
intelligence to assist with target testing of athletes under suspicion,”
he added.
Fahey said that WADA’s intention is to make the upcoming Games, starting on July 27, as clean as possible.
“I should also add that UK Anti-Doping is mandated to
test athletes in training camps ahead of the Games and has also
compiled much intelligence with the co-operation of anti-doping
organisations worldwide.
“There has been a coherent effort to make London 2012
as ‘clean’ as possible and doping athletes should know that their
chances of avoiding detection are the smallest they have ever been,”
said Fahey after entreating dope cheaters to stay away from the
quadrennial sporting spectacle.
“I say this in the clearest way possible: ‘if you are
a doping athlete and you are planning to compete in London then you
must withdraw from your Olympic team’.
“Doping is cheating, plain and simple. And if you
compete in London as a doped athlete then not only will you be cheating
your fellow athletes, you will be cheating fans across the world, doing a
disservice to your national flag and flouting the ideals of the Olympic
Movement.
“A doping athlete cannot achieve success, it is a
complete contradiction. Even if a doping athlete were to win a medal he
or she would never be able to look at themselves in the mirror and say
‘well done, I deserved this’,” the WADA chief said.
“The Olympic Games is the absolute pinnacle for many
athletes, and for them to train endlessly over a four-year period and
then have their efforts belittled by a doping athlete, to me that is
complete and utter betrayal of what sport stands for,” Fahey said.
The WADA president also applauded the efforts of the
world’s anti-doping community in trying to identify doping athletes
ahead of the Games, as well as the International Olympic Committee and
Games organisers LOCOG for preparing a comprehensive anti-doping
programme.
Despite the work of the world’s anti-doping
community, Fahey stressed that ultimate responsibility lay with the
athletes as to how free of doping London 2012 will be.
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