BCCI unlikely to cave in to NADA pressure

October 30, 2017 10:09 pm | Updated 10:10 pm IST - New Delhi

The BCCI brass will soon have a meeting to chalk out a plan to deal with mounting pressure from the National Anti-Doping Agency (NADA) that wants Virat Kohli and Co under its ambit.

There is a Committee of Administrators (COA) meeting in Mumbai on November 3, where the issue will come up for discussion but, as of now, the Indian cricket’s governing body is unlikely to budge from its current stand.

The top leadership of BCCI believes that trying to get a Virat Kohli or Mahendra Singh Dhoni sign the ‘whereabouts clause’ is one of the main reasons behind NADA wanting BCCI to come under its wing.

Whereabouts are information provided by a limited number of top elite athletes about their location to the International Sport Federation (IF) or National Anti-Doping Organization (NADA in this case), which include them in their respective registered testing pool as part of these top elite athletes’ anti-doping responsibilities.

The BCCI had hired Sweden’s International Drug Testing Management (IDTM) for testing work and is likely to continue with it.

With reports emerging that NADA is likely to send its Doping Control Officers (DCO) during the domestic tournaments and if BCCI doesn’t co-operate, will take legal route, but senior board officials are wondering whether that would be as easy as top government officials are making it out to be.

“BCCI is not a signatory to NADA code and therefore under no compulsion to release our cricketers for the dope test.

“We are under ICC, which is WADA compliant. At ICC events, our cricketers are tested by WADA But since we are not a National Sports Federation (NSF), we are under no obligation to become NADA signatory,” a senior BCCI official said.

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