Wada
-
The chairman of the UK governing body has demanded that the IAAF responds immediately to the allegations made by German television documentary
-
Russia’s Athletics president has dismissed a German TV documentary alleging widespread doping among Russian athletes
-
Athletes could be forced to miss international events if national federations are not compliant with Wada’s global rules
-
Justin Gatlin has questioned why criticism has come in wake of a nomination for an award rather than his for his performances on the track and at major competitions
-
The Italian rider had almost double the limit of a medication used to treat asthma
-
The World Anti-doping Agency has appealed against the punishments imposed on three allies of Lance Armstrong in cases which will now be heard by the Court of Arbitration for Sport
-
The Jamaican 400m runner Dominique Blake has had her doping ban reduced by the court of arbitration for sport
-
Sean Ingle: Tyson Gay's one-year ban is a step towards a new Wada code granting leniency to cheats who turn supergrass
-
Team Sky called for opioid Tramadol to be added to Wada's banned list in response to comments made by former team-mate of Lance Armstrong
-
The Australian rider will face no further action after the UCI accepted he ingested clenbuterol via contaminated meat
-
The World Anti-Doping Agency has called on football to harmonise its approach to tackling doping across international tournaments and domestic leagues
-
The German broadcaster WDR has alleged that Russian athletes inhale the gas but experts are divided on whether it would even work
-
Wada's David Howman warned 25% of the world's pharmaceuticals were sold on the black market but insisted Russia was making progress in fight against doping
-
The World Anti-Doping Agency has condemned evidence of the availability of an undetectable new muscle-growth drug on the eve of the Sochi Games
-
Sean Ingle: The expertise and willingness to take hold of cheating in sport does not exist, says the man formerly responsible for drug-testing Norway's athletes
-
The independent commission set up by Brian Cookson to investigate allegations of mismanagement of anti-doping cases by the UCI has started its preparatory work
-
Athletes may soon have their hair tested to determine if they are drugs cheats, the new World Anti-Doping Agency president has warned
-
Team Sky's Jonathan Tiernan-Locke has been told he will face disciplinary action for an anti-doping violation
-
James Hird has forced a backdown from the AFL and will be paid while he is suspended but bigger problems loom for Essendon
-
The entire board of the Jamaica Anti-Doping Commission has resigned with immediate effect in the wake of an emergency visit from the World Anti-Doping Agency
-
Usain Bolt has claimed the World Anti-Doping Agency's high-profile investigation into Jamaica may cost him a lucrative sponsorship deal because the potential sponsor wrongly believes Wada's warnings that the island could be thrown out of the 2016 Olympics
-
Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce, winner of three world golds this year, has said Jamaica's Athletics Administrative Authority is not doing enough to defend athletes from 'hurtful' accusations
-
Fifa's chief medical officer, Jiri Dvorak, explains Fifa's plans for drugs testing at the 2014 World Cup
-
-
The International Olympic Committee president Thomas Bach tells the World Anti Doping Agency conference in Johannesburg that he would 'feel very uncomfortable' at the prospect of Lance Armstrong's lifetime ban from cycling for doping being overturned
-
Marina Hyde: If the anti-doping agency was hoping to gild its conference with the headline 'Wada exposes flaws in Jadco operation', then I'm afraid the caravan has moved on
-
Wada's executive committee expects to consider the report from an inspection in Jamaica next Tuesday and to meet Kenyan officials to discuss a spike in positive tests
-
The new UCI head, Brian Cookson, has said there has been no communication so far from Lance Armstrong regarding a 'truth and reconciliation' process
-
-
Wada turn up heat on Kenya after the African country failed to investigate a spike in athletes testing positive for banned substances
-
Jamaican politicians welcome the arrival of a delegation from World Anti-Doping Authority in the country
-
Jamaican athletics' national governing body has brushed off the threat of being excluded from the Olympics
-
Athletes such as Usain Bolt could face exclusion from the Olympics over the nation's drug testing regime, says the Wada president
-
-
Marina Hyde: What on earth is the Jamaica Anti-Doping Commission doing that it can't accommodate Wada to investigate claims its athletes were rarely drug-tested until 2014?
-
Usain Bolt's coach, Glen Mills, has defended Jamaica's sprinters and the island's anti-doping programme
-
The World's Anti-doping Agency is to launch an 'extraordinary' audit of Jamaica's drug-testing agency following allegations that its policing of the island's athletes all but collapsed in the months before the London Olympics
-
About 65 results for Wada
1
2
Topics
- Drugs in sport
- Athletics
- Cycling
- Olympics
- US sports
- Jamaica Olympic team
- UCI (Union Cycliste Internationale)
- Lance Armstrong
- International Olympic Committee
- Usain Bolt
- Asafa Powell
- Winter Olympics
- Winter Olympics 2014
- Team Sky
- Asada
- Russia
- Australia sport
- Europe
- Usada (United States Anti-Doping Agency)
- Kenya
Sportblog Doping revelations offer Lord Coe daunting athletics clean-up job