Pubdate: Thu, 26 Feb 2004
Source: Varsity, The (CN ON Edu)
Copyright: 2004 The Varsity
Contact:  http://www.thevarsity.ca/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2663
Author: Kevin Kennedy
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing)

DRUG TESTING 14-YEAR-OLDS DEEMED NECESSARY

New Regulations In Quebec Target Young Offenders

The Link, MONTREAL (CUP) -- In an unprecedented decision, Quebec's AAA 
Midget Hockey League (QMJHL) will begin drug testing its players for 
performance-enhancing drugs this coming March. According to league 
president Martin Roy, preliminary surveys suggested that 25 per cent of 
players in the league were consuming drugs.

Before taking the job as head coach of the Concordia men's hockey team, 
Kevin Figsby was the bench boss for the AAA Lac St. Louis organization. He 
believes that the implementation of testing in midget hockey is a result of 
an exaggeration of the truth and possibly a knee-jerk reaction to the 
announcement of testing in the QMJHL. "It's a little premature to be 
testing kids at that age," Figsby said. "It adds a negative connotation to 
the fun that the kids are having playing the game of hockey."

Any players who test positive for a performance-enhancing steroid will 
receive a six-game suspension on their first offence and a one-year ban for 
their second.

University athletes have been subject to random drug testing since 1993, 
according to Canadian Interuniversity Sport (CIS) CEO Marg MacGregor. "We 
test between 300 and 400 athletes from every sport each year," he said.

The Concordia men's hockey team hasn't been tested for the last two 
seasons, but was subject to testing three separate times in 2000. MacGregor 
chose not to comment on any actions taken by another athletic organization, 
asserting that "they probably have a better understanding of their 
situation than I do."

But the CIS boss does not feel that testing kids aged between 14 and 16 is 
inappropriate or unprecedented. "We have high performance athletes 
competing at the Olympics at the age of 14; they are tested, so I don't 
feel that the actions of the league are out of line."

Many experts also predict that the first detection of genetic manipulation 
will occur at the upcoming 2008 Olympics in Beijing, China. Sociology 
professor Val Morrison understands the severe consequences that genetic 
manipulation could potentially bring into sport and feels that "because of 
its early stages, it will be a much more physically devastating instance 
than any we have seen thus far."

A likely consequence of this type of drug use is hard to believe, but it 
wouldn't be too surprising to see the bones of an athlete shatter or 
explode upon rigorous impact.

With a plethora of information on narcotics available these days, it is 
both surprising and disappointing that league administrators across the 
country are essentially forced to implement these kinds of regulations upon 
its athletes. But where should the blame fall? Young athletes have never 
been under as much pressure as they are today to perform.

Previously, teenagers were found as top athletes only in non-contact sports 
such as tennis and gymnastics. But in recent years 18-year-olds have made 
their way into NHL starting lineups. This early admission into professional 
sports has added strain onto amateur development associations such as the 
Quebec AAA Midget League because its players are constantly fast-tracked up 
the ranks and specific teams are not given enough time to educate their 
players on the dangers of using drugs. Rather, they are forced by mandates 
to concentrate on the success of the team and the development of the 
players up to their full potential.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom