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The BBC's Sports correspondernt Adam Mynott
"His positive test has come as a surprise to many"
 real 28k

The BBC's Athletics correspondent John Rawling
"He says he has followed the laws to the letter and has done nothing wrong"
 real 28k

Mark Richardson
"I've got nothing to hide"
 real 28k

Michele Verroken, UK Sports Council
"We have seen reports of nutritional supplements containing steroids"
 real 28k

Tuesday, 8 February, 2000, 00:54 GMT
Olympic medallist fails drug test

Mark Richardson Richardson learned of the test result last November


British 400 metres runner Mark Richardson is one of two UK athletes who have tested positive for the banned steroid nandrolone.


I would never take anything illegal, I never have done
Mark Richardson
Richardson, who shot to prominence when he was part of the British 4x400m relay team which won silver at the 1996 Atlanta Olympics, confirmed the news to the BBC.

UK Athletics had said it would announce the names of the two athletes later this week when the relevant parties had been informed.

But Richardson told the BBC that he had learned of the test result last November.

Drugs in sport
Steroids Q&A
Enhancing performance
The science of testing
Have your say
"Anybody who knows me, who knows what I'm about, knows why I'm in the sport, knows that this is just a farce," Richardson, 27, told the BBC.

"I would never take anything illegal, I never have done."

Richardson said he had decided to reveal the news of his test failure because he had nothing to hide.

"I didn't want to hide away like a criminal," he said.

The other UK athlete remains unidentified. The pair are the latest in a string of British athletes to test positive for nandrolone.

Diet supplements

Former Olympic 100m champion Linford Christie was the biggest name to fall foul of the testing procedure.

Positive nandrolone tests
Linford Christie, Britain, sprinter
Merlene Ottey, Jamaica, sprinter
Doug Walker, Britain, sprinter
Mark Richardson, Britain, swimmer
Petr Korda, Czech, tennis player
Djamel Bouras, France, judo player
Spencer Smith, Britain, triathlete
Igor Shalimov, Russia, footballer
Christophe Dugarry, France, rugby player
His case, along with that of European 200m gold medallist Doug Walker and 400m hurdler Gary Cadogan, has been referred to the International Amateur Athletic Federation's arbitration panel after all three denied taking the steroid.

A BBC correspondent says both Richardson and Walker admit they have taken diet supplements.

Scientists last month concluded a report into whether such supplements are behind the rash of positive nandrolone tests by British athletes.

In 1999, there were 17 positive tests for nandrolone by UK athletes, compared with four in 1998.

Richardson said with the 2000 Sydney Olympics just months away, the number of UK athletes testing positive was a matter for real concern.

"This is Olympic year, a lot of hopes and dreams are riding on this year and you could find half the team is caught up in a nandrolone situation - it's frightening," he said.

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See also:
08 Feb 00 |  Sport
Team-mate brands Richardson naive
08 Feb 00 |  Sport
Star still waiting for solo gold
18 Jan 00 |  World Athletics
Sport drugs probe blames diet pills
05 Aug 99 |  Medical notes
Nandrolone and anabolic steroids
05 Aug 99 |  Sci/Tech
Are drug tests reliable?
25 Nov 99 |  Sport
Christie will not fight dope charge
24 Nov 99 |  Sport
Walker sues athletics chiefs over drug test
19 Nov 99 |  Sport
Christie could get two-year ban
14 Nov 99 |  Sport
Ottey cleared of drug charge

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