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Dublin: 12 °C Friday 24 May, 2013

Biological passports to be in place for World Cup 2014, FIFA says

A delegation from WADA met with football’s governing body yesterday.

IF IRELAND GET to the World Cup next year, our players will have to conform to new FIFA anti-doping measures.

Every player at the tournament will be required to have a biological passport, the sport’s world governing body announced today.

FIFA intend to introduce the system of biological profiling at this year’s Confederations Cup in Brazil, as part of the worldwide crackdown on doping in sport and it should be fully operational by the next World Cup.

A delegation from the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) met FIFA officials at their Zurich headquarters on Thursday, and WADA president John Fahey said his agency was “very satisfied with the commitment of FIFA on the biological profiles”.

FIFA medical officer Michel D’Hooghe said: “FIFA was the first international organisation for team sport to start with longitudinal profiles.”

He explained that FIFA is developing plans to introduce profiling, including a steroid profile through urine and a blood profile, for the Confederations Cup, where in- and out-of-competition tests would be conducted on all participating players, as well as unannounced blood testing at training camps and games.

“And it’s our commitment to have all players participating at the 2014 FIFA World Cup having biological profiles,” he added

Biological profiling is considered one of the most effective methods of detecting the use of performance-enhancing drugs and blood boosters like EPO.

EPO was first tested for by FIFA at the 2002 World Cup where all players had to underego urine and blood testing and whenever the results were abnormal, an EPO test was performed. All results were negative. FIFA is also developing the hormonal profiling project, a new initiative in collaboration with the WADA-accredited laboratory in Switzerland.

“There is always more which can be done in the fight against doping, but we know FIFA has always been serious in this domain,” Fahey said.

- © AFP, 2012

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Comments (14 Comments)

  • Mine will be 70% horse DNA

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  • Any chance these measures will keep toxic Sepp Blatter away form the 2014 World Cup?

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  • What exactly does a biological passport entail ?

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    • Blood is taken at different times and various readings are taken from it. You then check them against each other.

      Rather that just looking at one value, which can be different for different people, you’re then looking at the profile of an individual. E.g. if there’s a sudden spike in haemocrit, it’s a strong indicator of cheating, even if you can’t find the actual drug. If it’s too consistent, that’s also suspicious: your haemocrit would be expected to fall after a number of games in close succession, so if it doesn’t, it’s likely that you’re cheating.

      You can also use it to build a “suspicion table” and test the most suspicious athletes more often.

      That’s a short and dirty version.

      Reply
    • The biological passport is basically a collection of all an athletes previous tests all collected and collated so that if there is any variance in a riders tests, it will be picked up and investigated. There is a much more stringent and frequent testing system, such as out of competition testing and the whereabouts rule that states an athlete must give his/her location throughout the year at all times so that a sample may be taken at any time, anywhere.

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  • Maybe check some managers (no name in particular) for mind altering substances and the detrimental effect it has on supporters enjoyment.

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  • its not a bad idea, performance enhancing isn’t really that big a problem in high skill sports like football though, they should really bring it in for mainly physical sports like rugby, would surely catch loads of cheats then

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  • Thanks Emily and John

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  • If you test two random players from each side after every game, like in Italy, then that would eradicate the issue all together. I don’t know how they would test players in the off season.

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    • Call to players homes the same way they do in cycling. A professional cyclist must be available for testing 365 days a year. This started some years ago when the UCI adopted bio passports and is slowly cleaning up a sport that’s had a long history of drug abuse.

      Reply

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