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AFL doping scandal: steak theory rejected

Mar 31, 2015
Magpie Lachlan Keeffe in action against Port Adelaide during the 2014 season.

Magpie Lachlan Keeffe in action against Port Adelaide during the 2014 season.

The theory that Collingwood pair Lachie Keeffe and Josh Thomas could have eaten beef contaminated by clenbuterol in New Zealand has been rejected by the NZ beef industry.

Keeffe and Thomas tested positive to the banned drug several days after returning from a week-long training camp in Queenstown, New Zealand, where they reportedly ate out several times, including a steak meal.

Australian cyclist Michael Rogers was cleared after testing positive to clenbuterol in 2013 when authorities accepted he could have eaten contaminated meat while racing in China two months earlier.

While clenbuterol is used in livestock in some countries, New Zealand beef industry association chairman Bill Falconer was adamant that was not the case in his country.

“It’s just not something that has cropped up in New Zealand,” Falconer told Radio 3AW.

“Obviously you can read stuff to say that there had been rumours of it happening in China and Spain but not in New Zealand.”

Former ASADA head Richard Ings also dismissed the possibility.

“Clenbuterol is not present in the Australian food chain. It is not present in the New Zealand food chain, it has occurred in China and Mexico but it is not an issue here,” Ings told 3AW.

“So the players will need to find the right explanation where this Clenbuterol came from.

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“It’s a veterinary drug in Australia, it’s a veterinary drug in New Zealand, it’s only approved for use in racehorses.

“But as with all these performance enhancing drugs you can get it online and there is a person at the back of some gyms that will sell it to you. It is commonly abused in bodybuilding and other sporting activities.”

Keeffe and Thomas have denied knowingly taking the drug and have sought independent legal advice through the players’ association.

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