Breaking News: Shoaib and Asif cleared of doping charges

Re: Breaking News: Shoaib and Asif cleared of doping charges

Divergence in doping policies will not work

Laugh, cry, pull out hair, or applaud? It’s difficult to know exactly what to do with the decision of the appellate committee to completely overturn the bans imposed on Shoaib Akhtar and Mohammad Asif by a previous tribunal.

Set aside details for a moment: the first broad message conveyed - possibly the most significant - is that two players who have tested positive for a banned substance have been let off without any punishment at all. Even granting them the benefit of doubt and acknowledging that there was no intent, nothing at all, not even a piddling fine or a slap on the wrists? For ignorance at least? What that says to young cricketers in Pakistan is frightening. **The more cynical might extend it and argue that Shoaib Akhtar can have a suspect action, test positive for drugs and tamper with the ball (he’s been caught twice and Sky TV caught him doing something suspicious with the ball in an ODI in England this summer) and still have an international career. **
**For Pakistanis who are celebrating this decision, they should first cast a sombre glance at the cases of Meherullah Lassi and Faisal Karim. They are possibly Pakistan’s best boxers, among the region’s cream as well, and they have just been handed life bans by the Pakistan Boxing Federation for testing positive for use of cannabis. The cases and circumstances differ but seen together, the message Pakistan sports sends out is inconsistent. **
Now in the details, the messages are equally mixed. In effect, one committee has referred to international regulations, claimed ignorance is no excuse, and punished the players. Another committee subsequently claims that ignorance is an excuse and that local regulations should be applied, which duly exonerate the players.
Which of the committees was right? I admit I thought the first one had got the decision correct, firm but fair. But Intikhab Alam’s comments a day after the decision, regarding Shoaib in particular and how he had to be made an example of for his lifestyle if nothing else, discredited his own verdict badly.
The second committee also has a point - this was an internal matter they argued and thus any judgment should have been based on internal codes. But one of the committee’s members, Danish Zaheer, a medical expert, has expressed serious dissent with the judgment. As well as saying that the testing procedure was flawed, he also claims that the ‘exceptional circumstances’ (possible contamination of nutritional supplements used by the players with banned substances) by which the players were absolved were never authentically proved to the appellate committee. The supplements were never provided for analysis, as they have been in other cases where a drugs ban has been overturned, so how was a conclusion reached?
At least on one point both committees agreed and that is the failure of the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) - not specific regimes but as a generic administration - in all this. For starters, the lawyers representing Shoaib have insisted that the PCB’s anti-doping regulations are, to put it mildly, laughably flimsy, vague and completely out of sync with international codes. The deeper malaise is that they don’t seem to have ever treated the issue of doping with any great seriousness. Both reports highlight dangerous neglect on the part of PCB officials and members of the team management in ensuring that players were constantly kept aware of doping issues. Neither the anti-doping officer (yes, there is one) nor the physiotherapist or the trainer has taken responsibility for dispensing information on doping; they have passed the buck and it hasn’t stopped anywhere.
In all this, there is an uneasy question for the game as a whole: how can cricket operate with such a wide divergence in the doping policies of a national board and the body that runs cricket? It is a divergence wide enough for one set of rules to impose a harsh punishment and another to completely absolve them.

What happens, as one reader rightly asked, if the players test positive during the ICC World Cup now, knowing that nandrolone remains traceable in the bloodstream for a considerable period of time after it has been ingested?

Undoubtedly, the ICC and WADA will have their say over the next couple of days, but perhaps they should first reflect on the need to align cricket’s policies as a whole and ensure that one code applies to all cricketers, as it does to athletes. What happens, as one reader rightly asked, if the players test positive during the ICC World Cup now, knowing that nandrolone remains traceable in the bloodstream for a considerable period of time after it has been ingested?
Indeed, is there any sense in only instituting dope tests during major events as they currently do? What is preventing them from instigating testing during bi-lateral series and tours, or for ODI tournaments not organized by the ICC? Is it not their duty to keep a tighter vigil on such issues?
Of course, the other lasting message that will resonate around the world is that the whole affair gives off the nasty odour of a PCB sham, from start to finish. People will not delve into details and legal lacunae in the two reports. They will simply see that two key players tested positive for substance abuse, were banned and then reinstated with crucial assignments on the horizon. In any language, that is a sham. Laugh, cry, pull out hair, or applaud? Do it all. In unison.

Re: Breaking News: Shoaib and Asif cleared of doping charges

It's clear to every one that the lifting of bans on Akhtar and Asif has everthing to do with looming important assignments next year including the small matter of a cricket world cup. Otherwise it's highly unlikely that they would have been exonerated. At best their sentences would have been lessened.

Re: Breaking News: Shoaib and Asif cleared of doping charges

Is this propaganda by Indian media?
Correct me if I am wrong but I am not aware of any Pakistani publication by the name ‘The Post’

Cricket News, Live Cricket Scores, ICC Cricket World T20 2016 News & Headlines | Times of India
Shoaib-Asif let-off slammed by Pak media
**ISLAMABAD, Dec 6: **“Questionable reprieve” - this is how the Pakistani media on Wednesday described the overturning of the bans on dope-tainted pace duo Shoaib Akhtar and Mohammad Asif.

The various dailies slammed the decision of the appellate tribunal to lift the bans on the bowlers citing a “fig leaf of exceptional circumstances” and said it was bound to raise the eyebrows of the ICC and the World Anti-Doping Agency.

“Regardless of a split decision among the three-member review panel that heard their appeals, both Shoaib and Asif have in fact been proved to have taken a banned substance. No review panel in the world can change that fact,” an editorial in ‘The Post’ said.

In the hard-hitting editorial, titled “A strange let-off”, it said if the decision of the tribunal was driven by subjective reasons rather than hard evidence, why did they not assign any weight to the pride of Pakistan cricket that would be damaged by fielding two established dope cheaters.

“A nation’s pride is much more valuable than the pride of any individual. If by some miracle, Pakistan can win the World Cup utilising two druggies, will it add to the pride of our nation,” it wondered.

In a special article, ‘The Nation’ ridiculed Pakistan Cricket Board Chairman Dr. Naseem Ashraf for singing different tunes.

“In what is tantamount to a most stunning total reversal, the tribunal reviewing the appeals of Pakistan’s pace spearheads in its verdict has acquitted the duo, overturning the one and two year bans respectively imposed by a PCB tribunal only 34 days ago,” it said.

The decision may come as a huge relief for the Pakistan cricket team but the risks of “disgrace” by bringing the two back could be great, it said.

It said only few weeks ago PCB Chairman Dr. Naseem Ashraf while backing the earlier decision of another panel to ban the players had said the Board would not compromise on discipline - no matter how important a player is involved.

"On Tuesday, Dr. Ashraf called the decision ‘open and honest’ and said that ‘it should be respected’. While the good doctor may be happy, and indeed he sounds as if he is, the question that remains is whether we have heard the last of the saga?

“Would the fig leaf of ‘exceptional circumstances’ wash with the International Cricket Council and the World Anti-Doping Agency? Would they let the issue pass as the PCB’s internal matter and not breathe down the Board’s neck on what is likely to be a let-off in their eyes?”

“By all accounts, it seems that the PCB is likely to stay in the dock on this for a while yet.”

‘The News’ in its editorial said the exoneration was surprising but a positive development for Pakistan cricket and especially the national team.

“For one, it will surely strengthen the pace attack and improve the team’s chances of doing well in the West Indies when it goes there to play the cricket World Cup next March.”

"That said, the committee’s verdict is bound to raise eyebrows within the ICC and the WADA. Both these bodies had welcomed the earlier ban as proof that the Pakistani cricket authorities had finally acted independently to nip in the bud a malaise that many feels has spread its tentacles across the sport.

Re: Breaking News: Shoaib and Asif cleared of doping charges

Haseeb Ahsan did'nt sound very intelligent when explaining the reasons for his decision.He said that they were not warned about the supplements that they took,first of all how does he know that the supplements were contaminated?theres another problems here the supplement that Asif was taking a protein supplement with amino acids is very unlikely to be contaminated.Shoaib Akhtar took a lot of supplements inculding a supplement called 't-bomb 2' which is supposed to raise your testosterone level naturally and can be suspected of being contaminated with anabolic steroids although no test was done on the supplement to determine that.

Re: Breaking News: Shoaib and Asif cleared of doping charges

West Indies captain Brian Lara urged respect on Thursday for a decision by the Pakistan Cricket Board to clear bowlers Shoaib Akhtar and Mohammad Asif of doping and said he hoped there would not be a negative reaction.
"We must respect the decision of the Pakistan board. They are people of integrity in there," Lara told a news conference before the second one-day international on Friday.
"I just hope that the negativity surrounding this case does not spiral into anything else," he said.
An appeals tribunal, headed by a former judge, cleared Shoaib and Asif on Wednesday and lifted their two and one-year bans after finding them not guilty of intentionally taking the banned substance nandrolone.
Lara said it was important for Pakistan and world cricket that the issue was closed. "I think this is good for Pakistan cricket and also for next year's World Cup," he said.
Pakistan captain Inzamam-ul-Haq said he would not like to see Akhtar and Asif rushed back into international cricket.
"I think realistically they will be with us on the tour to South Africa in Jan. They should be allowed to play some domestic cricket to get back into the swing of things," he said.

Re: Breaking News: Shoaib and Asif cleared of doping charges

I feel that the board did the right thing. We want the best team possible. Drugs or no drugs, so many others have gotten away with it, admitted it makes Pakistan look like a laughing stock-they should just have covered it up in the 1st place...but oh well, who cares about the reputation of the PCB or the opinion of the ICC, they're just a bunch of administartors. Let's just stick to actually playing the game.... :) ...and Brian Lara...Respect...a true sportsperson...he wants a challenge...unlike quite a few out there who are happy with easy runs :P

Re: Breaking News: Shoaib and Asif cleared of doping charges

[quote=goldenAsif]
Is this propaganda by Indian media?
Correct me if I am wrong but I am not aware of any Pakistani publication by the name ‘The Post’

quote]

here you go…
small time paper with limited circulation… the urdu version “khabrain” has some circulation

Re: Breaking News: Shoaib and Asif cleared of doping charges

Pakistan plays by own rules

Comment by Malcolm Conn
*December 07, 2006
**THE Pakistan Cricket Board once again issued a two-finger salute to the cricket world when an appeals board reversed the drug bans of Shoaib Akhtar and Mohammad Asif.
*
As unjust and embarrassing as this decision appears to be, the PCB can - not for the first time - continue to thumb its nose at the game with impunity because of cricket's shambolic structure. The World Anti Doping Agency (WADA) may be attempting to step in and take action but, quite remarkably for such a rich and high-profile international sport as cricket, Pakistan and its players are beyond WADA's reach.
The PCB is not a signatory to WADA and, while the game's governing body, the International Cricket Council, may be WADA-compliant, this covers only players involved in ICC events such as the Champions Trophy and Cricket World Cup.
So because Shoaib and Asif were tested by the PCB at the request of coach Bob Woolmer before the Champions Trophy, acting on widespread rumours that some Pakistan players were taking performance-enhancing drugs, the tests were conducted outside the jurisdiction of the ICC.
This means the ICC and, by extension, WADA will have a very difficult time ensuring that justice prevails.
The one faint hope for WADA is that the PCB applied the "exceptional circumstances rule".
The PCB's drugs panel appeal chief, Fakhruddin Ibrahim, a retired judge, claimed it was evident that neither Shoaib nor Asif were warned or cautioned against taking "supplements".
In anti-doping parlance, the word supplements has become such a common excuse that rule-makers have made it clear this has little credibility.
The world governing body for athletics, the IAAF, bars a plea under the "exceptional circumstances" rule that the substance could have come from a supplement.
The WADA code makes clear that sanction cannot be completely eliminated on the basis of no fault or negligence if a positive test results from a mislabelled or contaminated vitamin or nutritional supplement. Penalties can be reduced.
The PCB appeals panel has apparently wiped the sanction out in one stroke on the simple argument that the cricketers were neither told nor were they aware of the presence of prohibited substances in the supplements.
At the very least, the cricketers should have been forced to prove how the banned substance entered their bodies. This is a prerequisite for a reduction of the sanction under the "exceptional circumstances" rule.
If the bans against Shoaib and Asif are not reinstated then, a little more than a month after the ICC sacked umpire Darrell Hair in disgraceful circumstances and agreed to readmit pariah Zimbabwe into the Test arena next year, the cricket world will be left without credibility. Yet again.

--The Australian

See what i mean; they just don't want to face asif and akhtar, and with shabbir coming abck, and gul bowling well...we look set for the cup...and notice how he mentioned hair's sacking :P sour graped aussie...

Re: Breaking News: Shoaib and Asif cleared of doping charges

PCB Chair Dr. Nasim appeared on P.J Mir’s Q&A on ARY Digital last night.
Who was very candid and read from the original text of case report by Justice Zaheer & Brit Lawyer. It was proved beyond any shadow of a doubt that these player’s bought ‘Supplements’ from renowned London’s store where most of the international players do their shopping without being aware of any ‘banned ingredients’ in their purchases etc etc.
Secondly ICC had or has no jurisdiction over this dope test as being out of competition and then initiated by PCB’s own regulations - End of this story

Interestingly enough according to Dr. Nasim Indians are fumming over the decision and threatening to persue a serious querry from ICC over the PCB’s handling of the matter ( Appeal review panel was not initiated by the PCB)

Do I understand the anxiety of our Indian friends in this case? ** NO!**
Do they have the right to intervene and open up their own Pak bashing show?
YES!
I don’t expect any thing good from India but anti pakistani sentiments at any level, historicaly speaking. :mad::k:

Re: Breaking News: Shoaib and Asif cleared of doping charges

[quote=Antumul alona]

Thanx AA…seriously I had not heard of it before

Re: Breaking News: Shoaib and Asif cleared of doping charges

Very true :k:. We know how Pakistani-centric the Indians are. Pak- bashing is their favourite past time. The verdict seems to have hurt the Indians (who are naturally worried about SRT getting another working over from Akhtar and Asif when India visit Pakistan in Dec. 2007 :wink: ) and Australians more than any other nation.

Re: Breaking News: Shoaib and Asif cleared of doping charges

lol...exactly!!!

Re: Breaking News: Shoaib and Asif cleared of doping charges

Another example of how PAK-obsessed Indian media is?


Shoaib, Asif to be tested before World Cup: PCB


The Pakistan Cricket Board has said pacemen Shoaib Akhtar and Mohammad Asif would be allowed to compete in the World Cup next year only after they cleared a fresh dope test.

PCB Chairman Dr. Nasim Ashraf said the fast bowlers had been “lucky” to get a reprieve this time but if they flunked a dope test at an ICC event, they would get banned automatically.

‘PCB chief tried to subvert dope panel’ ](Cricket News, Live Cricket Scores, ICC Cricket World T20 2016 News & Headlines | Times of India)

He said categorically that if they failed the test, they would not be selected for the World Cup which is an International Cricket Council tournament and in which the World Anti-Doping Agency regulations apply.

“They were let off by the appeals committee because it worked under the PCB anti-doping regulations. They were lucky. But if they test positive in an ICC tournament, then they will be automatically banned for two years and though there is an appeals process I don’t think we will be able to do anything,” Ashraf said in an interview to a TV channel.

He said all the players selected for the World Cup as well as the reserves would be tested and if there was a residue of banned substance, nandrolone, still remaining in the samples of Shoaib and Asif, they would not be selected.

He also conceded that Shoaib and Asif stood the risk of testing positive before the World Cup as traces of nandrolone remain in the body for four to six months. The two had first tested positive in early October while the World Cup is from March 13.

Asraf brushed aside concerns over fitness and attitude of skipper Inzamam-ul-Haq and said he would be retained as captain for the World Cup.

Re: Breaking News: Shoaib and Asif cleared of doping charges

cricinfo’s obsession with the verdict of the appellate tribunal continues

WADA concerned about Shoaib and Asif being cleared
Nagraj Gollapudi
http://content-uk.cricinfo.com/pakistan/content/story/272442.html
The World Anti Doping Agency (WADA) has expressed concern at the manner in which Shoaib Akhtar and Mohammad Asif, the Pakistan bowlers, were cleared by an appellate tribunal despite having “in essence accepted that they had the banned substance in their bodies” as they didn’t opt for a B-sample analysis.

“Should that go without a sanction? This doesn’t fit with the whole process that we have in place globally. So that is of some concern on the face of it”, David Howman, the WADA director-general, told Cricinfo in an interview.

Howman was echoing the words of Dick Pound, the WADA chief, who has termed the lifting of the bans as “aberrational.” Howman, former head of the New Zealand Sports Drug Agency, said he was not present when Pound made the statement but had an idea what he was getting at. “I don’t know what he said (but) I can anticipate that he might be saying that **it would be most unusual that athletes who have in essence accepted that they had the banned substance in their bodies they didn’t challenge the analysis by even getting the B tests analysed.” **