Kicker661 said:
Does the total positives for Clen - 483 - on a sample size of 1,334,000 tell you that there is widespread food contamination causing mass positives across the sporting world, bringing the foundation of drug testing to it's very knees?
I have to defend Franklin a little here. He isn’t saying that, he’s saying there is a danger of someone testing positive as a result of eating meat in Europe. Not often, but maybe once in a while. I still dispute that, of course.
Looking over the figures now (2012), I see the total tests have to be revised downward a little bit, because these include blood tests and the passport, which don’t test for CB. But that doesn’t affect the results much. Instead of 285,000 tests for 2012, there were about 252,000 urine tests. The 98 CB positives are still very low, less than 0.04%.
Moreover, a footnote on p. 7 says these reported AAF are not the same as sanctions, so it appears that the 98 positives for this year (and positives listed for other years, of course) does include cases where the athletes got off by arguing contamination. I don’t know how many cases this would amount to, but we have heard recently of numerous athletes making this argument successfully, e.g., five or so Mexican soccer players, and at least two cyclists, whose names I’ve forgotten, who tested positive in Mexico. That ping-pong player. And at least one boxer, Erik Morales, who is Mexican. These are only the ones I know off the top of my head, I’m sure there are others.
But in any case, that figure is very low, considering that it includes testing in places like Mexico and China.What I’d really like to see are data for CB in Europe and the U.S., but these are not presented in this report.
Edit: This is all I could get at USADA site, for 2012:
8490 tests, 73 positives for all substances, 19 pending cases, 33 sanctions, 21 not sanctioned.
36 cases resolved in 2012, none listed as CB, one listed as an anabolic agent, so it could be CB, but probably not. So while these 36 cases probably include ones begun before 2012, we can conclude that there are roughly 8500 tests every year, and for the most recent year, no more than one CB positive, if that.
If contamination is a major source of CB positives, one would expect more of these positives in places such as China and Mexico. Another thing to consider, though, is that standards of detection vary considerably from lab to lab. I guess, though I'm not sure, that labs in Europe (Koln for sure) and U.S. probably can detect lower levels than those in third world countries.