Sport & Entertainment
| Jun 9, 2022

JADCO probe ordered after Jamaica loses out on World Record achievement

/ Our Today

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Jamaica’s Under 20 women’s 4×100 relay team that set a time of 42.58 seconds at the Carifta Games in Kingston on April 17. From left: Tina Clayton, Serena Cole, Brianna Lyston and Tia Clayton. (Photo: panamsports.org)

A disciplinary subcommittee of the Jamaica Anti-Doping Commission (JADCO) Board is being established to carry out an investigation and take appropriate action, following the decision by World Athletics not to ratify a world record achieved recently by a quartet of Jamaica’s young athletes.

Olivia Grange, minister of culture, gender, entertainment and sport, made the announcement during her contribution to the 2022-2023 Sectoral Debate in the House of Representatives on Wednesday (June 8).

At the April Carifta Games at the National Stadium in Kingston, the young athletes – Serena Cole, Tina Clayton, Brianna Lyston and Tia Clayton – won the Under 20 4×100 metres relay in the world record-breaking time of 42.58 seconds.

WORLD RECORD TIME WILL NOT BE RATIFIED

The time will however not be ratified by World Athletics because one of the four members of the quartet was not drug tested at the completion of the race on April 17.

Grange announced, as well, that compulsory retraining is to be done of all technical services staff on the rules of competition governing the major sporting organisations. She added that a list of these organisations is to be agreed on by the JADCO Board.

“As Minister, I offer a sincere apology to the young athletes affected by this unfortunate set of circumstances for which there must be consequences.”

Olivia Grange, minister of culture, gender, entertainment and sport

Grange also said JADCO would review all procedures or protocols, which would require an event organiser or body requesting in-competition testing, to provide rules and specific and timely instructions in relation to that organisation, prior to the event.

“As Minister, I offer a sincere apology to the young athletes affected by this unfortunate set of circumstances for which there must be consequences,” she said, noting that such a situation must never recur.

Olivia Grange, minister of culture, gender, entertainment and sport, making her contribution to the 2022-2023 Sectoral Debate in the House of Representatives on Wednesday (June 8). (Photo: JIS)

She informed that the report from the JADCO chairman found that the failure to test one member of the relay team was “because of an apparent existing best practice at JADCO not to test an athlete twice within 24 hours of competition”.

She added that the “best practice” is not contained in the JADCO Rules, the International Standard for Testing, the World Anti-Doping Agency rules, and is not contained in any internal memorandum or document.

“It appears that it was an instruction originating, at least, from the time of the previous executive director,” Grange said.

She disclosed, as well, that the JADCO chairman’s report also stated that “JADCO applied its intended practice over and above what appears to be explicit instructions from the JAAA (Jamaica Athletics Administration Association)” – that is to provide “six tests per day with testing being done on any athlete who achieves a national or world record”.

Grange said that, in recent years, Jamaica’s reputation in anti-doping in sport has been excellent.

“This record must be maintained and built upon,” she said.

June Spence-Jarrett, executive director of the Jamaica Anti Doping Commission.

In the meantime, the minister informed that JADCO was now part of a Confederation of North, Central America and Caribbean Association Football (CONCACAF) project and will increase testing of national and international footballers.

Additionally, she said JADCO will increase testing of athletes who qualify for the various disciplines at the upcoming Athletics World Championships and the Commonwealth Games.

“We are tightening up,” she added.

Attorney-at-law Kent Gammon, newly appointed chairman of the Antidoping Disciplinary Panel. (Photo: Contributed)

Grange also announced the appointment of members to the Antidoping Disciplinary Panel to serve for the next three years, ending May 2025.

The panel will be chaired by Kent Gammon with vice chairs Georgia Gibson Henlin and O’Neil Brown.

The other members of the panel are Dr Japheth Ford, Dr Donovan Calder, Dr Marjorie Vassell, Denise Forrest, Heron Dale and Dean Martin.

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