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| Player: | Shoaib Akhtar, Mohammad Asif |
Pakistan's decision to drug-test their entire World Cup squad could end
in life bans for Shoaib Akhtar and Mohammad Asif, who recently won
doping reprieves, an expert warned on Friday.
Danish Zaheer, vice president of the Asian Federation of Sports
Medicine, said the two bowlers could still have banned substances in
their systems after testing positive in October.
"To me it is not the good timing for Akhtar and Asif to have re-tests
because if they test positive again, which is likely to happen, then on
a second offense they face life bans," Zaheer, a doctor, told AFP.
Akhtar and Asif are both likely inclusions when Pakistan's squad is
announced on Tuesday, despite testing positive for banned steroid
nandrolone in internal tests conducted by the Pakistan Cricket Board
(PCB).
Akhtar was banned for two years and Asif for one year by an Anti-Doping
Commission in November. But a month later, both were controversially
reinstated by an appellate committee, prompting the World Anti-Doping
Agency to appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS).
The CAS, based in Switzerland, is unlikely to hear the case before
April.
Zaheer said Pakistan should have dealt the WADA appeal before the
blanket re-testing, which was announced this week.
"The PCB and the athletes should have settled the CAS issue first which
would have allowed them to have a suitable line of action in order to
avoid double penalty or life ban," said Zaheer.
Zaheer said Akhtar and Asif should keep away from the World Cup if they
want to prolong their careers.
"The two players must get maximum time away from the competition in
order to avoid any testing until the World Cup. Their chances of having
over limit of banned substance would be much lower then, rather than if
PCB decides to test them now."
Pakistan have been given permission by the International Cricket
Council to replace any World Cup squad members who test positive.
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