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Rugby star banned 11 years in urine-swapping scandal after ‘most extensive anti-doping investigation ever’

DUBLIN — Six players from Georgia’s rugby team have been handed long bans — including one for 11 years — for their involvement in a urine-swapping scheme to cheat anti-doping tests in one of the sport’s biggest corruption scandals.

The case was described by World Rugby on Tuesday as “the most extensive anti-doping investigation ever undertaken in rugby.”

Former captain Merab Sharikadze was given the 11-year ban, while Giorgi Chkoidze was banned for six years, and Lasha Khmaladze, Otar Lashkhi and Miriani Modebadze received three-year suspensions. Lasha Lomidze was banned for nine months.

Merab Sharikadze, the captain of Georgia, holds Antim Cup after the 2024 Rugby Europe Championship semi-final match between Georgia and Romania at Mikheil Meskhi Stadium on March 2, 2024. Getty Images Nutsa Shamatava, the national team’s doctor, was banned for nine years for her role in the scandal, where she provided advance notice of upcoming out-of-competition doping controls to players in group chats.

World Rugby said it discovered irregularities in urine samples in the run-up to the men’s Rugby World Cup in France in 2023 and alerted the World Anti-Doping Agency.

Their joint investigation found the six players “engaged in swapping of urine samples to avoid the risk of testing positive for substances that they believed were prohibited, the former men’s first team doctor provided advance notice of testing and other members of staff arguably were or ought to be have been aware that such advance notice was provided,” read a summary in the independent report of the case.

Merab Sharikadze, the captain of Georgia, in action during the 2024 Rugby Europe Championship semi-final match between Georgia and Romania at Mikheil Meskhi Stadium on March 2, 2024. Getty Images World Rugby said the investigation revealed no evidence that the urine samples were substituted to conceal the use of performance-enhancing substances.

Instead, the governing body said there was “credible evidence” to support assertions by the six players that they concealed cannabis and a painkiller, tramadol.

The Georgia Rugby Union accepted a misconduct charge, World Rugby added, and agreed to an undisclosed financial penalty and to implement “a roadmap of various reforms and measures in its anti-doping training and education to mitigate the risk of any future issues of this nature arising.”

Read original at New York Post

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