Pakistan leg-spinner Yasir Shah has been banned for three months by
the International Cricket Council (ICC) after testing positive for a
banned substance in December.
The 29-year-old will be available to play again on March 27.
Shah was provisionally suspended on December 27 after his “A” sample
contained a banned substance – chlortalidone – which is on the World
Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) prohibited list.
The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) appealed against Shah’s ban on
January 10 after the leg-spinner was said to have taken his wife’s blood
pressure medication without knowing that it contained the banned
substance.
Yasir has 76 Test scalps in 12 Tests for his country and holds the
record for being the fastest Pakistani bowler to reach the 50-wicket
mark.
In a statement detailing the findings of Yasir’s case, the ICC said
it had ‘accepted that Mr Shah had inadvertently ingested the ‘Specified
Substance’ for therapeutic reasons, specifically to treat his blood
pressure.’
“He [Yasir] was able to satisfy the ICC through evidence and
submissions prepared on his behalf by the Pakistan Cricket Board that he
had no intention to enhance his sporting performance or to mask the use
of another performance enhancing substance and had, instead, mistakenly
taken his wife’s blood pressure medication that was identical in
appearance to his own but which contained the prohibited substance
chlortalidone,” the ICC said.
Yasir, who issued a joint statement with the ICC, assured his fans that he had ‘never taken a performance enhancing drug.’
“I assure all fans and followers of the Pakistan cricket team that I
have never taken a performance enhancing substance nor have I ever had
the intent of masking any such substance,” Yasir said.
“I have always been careful to check my medication with doctors and
medical support staff to ensure it does not contain any substance on the
prohibited list.”
“I acknowledge that I should have taken extra precautions to ensure
that my blood pressure medication was stored separately from my wife’s
medication so that there was no possibility of my wife’s medication
being mistaken for my own. Therefore, I accept the consequences imposed
upon me,” he added.
Although Yasir will be eligible to represent Pakistan on March 27,
it’s unclear whether he will be part of the team’s World Twenty20 plans
with the tournament running from March 11 to April 3.
Source: Dawn Nes
Recent Posts
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Advertisment
Follow us on facebook
Popular Posts
-
March 8 marks the 108th observance of International Women’s Day as we celebrate the achievements of inspiring women across the globe. ...
-
A married, father of two who moonlighted as an Uber driver is being blamed for a shooting rampage Saturday night that left six people dead ...
-
The Supreme Court appeared deeply divided Wednesday over the most far-reaching abortion rights case it has considered in a generation, with ...
-
That makes the Asia Cup 2016 match in Mirpur, Wednesday, critical, and passing by the way the two groups have played so far in this competit...
-
Associate Justice Antonin Scalia was found dead of apparent natural causes Saturday on a luxury resort in West Texas, federal officials sa...
-
A cease-fire in Syria's civil war that began at midnight Saturday local time was shaky from the start. Some combatants have not signed...
-
Investigators said Friday that the gunman who opened fire at a Kansas factory where he worked received a court order 90 minutes before the ...
-
Investigators think that as the San Bernardino, California, massacre was happening, female shooter Tashfeen Malik posted a pledge of alleg...
-
Kurdish forces have rescued a 16-year-old Swedish girl from ISIS in northern Iraq, according to regional Kurdish authorities. Kurdish ...
-
I’d be happy to accompany these five ladies to prom. Is this girls date older than her dad?
No comments:
Post a Comment