Dopers are beating system – athletics integrity chief

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Cheats are winning the battle against anti-doping authorities in elite sport, according to a top official.

David Howman, who chairs the Athletics Integrity Unit and served as director general of the World Anti-Doping Agency (Wada) for 13 years, says the anti-doping system has “stalled”, allowing those who take banned substances to prosper.

“Let’s be honest and pragmatic – the system has stalled,” Howman said.

“Intentional dopers at elite level are evading detection. We are not effective enough nowadays in catching cheats.

“Our ineffectiveness in dealing with those who are beating the rules is hurting the anti-doping movement’s credibility.”

Former world 100m silver medallist Marvin Bracy-Williams was banned for more than three and half years last month after admitting doping offences, while fellow American Erriyon Knighton was banned for four years in September after testing positive for steroids.

Women’s marathon world record holder Ruth Chepngetich was banned for three years in October after her sample showed a banned diuretic commonly used as a masking agent.

The unity of world anti-doping effort has been compromised in recent years.

Wada and the US anti-doping agency have clashed over the handling of a doping scandal involving 23 Chinese swimmers, funding and the staging of next year’s Enhanced Games, an event which encourages the use of banned substances, in Las Vegas.

The anti-doping authorities in Kenya, whose athletes have been involved in a spate of positive tests, are on a Wada watchlist, while Russia, whose officials were found to be involved in the systematic cheating and swapping of samples at the 2014 Winter Olympics at Sochi, are still judged as “non-compliant” by Wada.

Howman suggested better sharing of information among anti-doping bodies and a “bounty-hunting” style incentivisation to encourage them to proactively chase cheats.

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    Kirsty Coventry was elected as the IOC's first female president in March

‘Maduro will leave power’: Machado vows Venezuela leadership change

In her second public appearance after more than a year in hiding, Venezuelan opposition leader Maria Corina Machado has promised that, one way or another, the presidency of Nicolas Maduro will end.

Speaking to reporters in Oslo, Norway, on Friday, Machado added that she was still hopeful that a change in leadership in Venezuela would be peaceful.

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“Maduro will leave power, whether it is negotiated or not negotiated,” Machado said in Spanish. “I am focused on an orderly and peaceful transition.”

Her latest statement comes as the administration of US President Donald Trump maintains its buildup of military forces in the Caribbean.

The Trump administration has repeatedly struck alleged drug smuggling boats in the region, in what experts say amounts to extrajudicial killings. The president has also, in recent days, repeatedly threatened to begin operations on Venezuelan territories, in what he has characterised as actions to stem illegal drug flows from the country.

Maduro has accused the Trump administration of seeking to topple his government. Some critics have accused the US of aiming to open up Venezuela’s vast oil reserves to US and Western companies.

Machado, who remains popular in the Latin American country but was barred from running in last year’s presidential election, has been seen by many as Washington’s favourite to replace Maduro.

The opposition has maintained that Machado’s replacement, Edmond Gonzalez, won the July polls by a landslide, with a group of independent election experts later legitimising their evidence. Maduro has continued to claim victory.

On Thursday, Machado emerged in Oslo, Norway, where she received the Nobel Peace Prize after evading a travel ban in her home country.

Praise for Trump’s pressure

The 58-year-old opposition leader has aligned herself closely with Trump and Venezuela hawks in the Republican Party.

She has praised several actions taken by the Trump administration to pressure Maduro, including the US seizure of a sanctioned oil tanker in the Caribbean earlier this week.

Machado called Trump’s actions “decisive” in weakening Maduro’s government.

She has been more circumspect on the prospect of military action on Venezuelan territory, saying only on Thursday that Venezuela “has already been invaded”.

“We have the Russian agents, we have the Iranian agents, we have terrorist groups such as Hezbollah, Hamas, operating freely in accordance with the regime. We have the Colombian guerrilla, the drug cartels,” she said.

On Friday, she predicted that Venezuela’s armed forces would comply with a transition of power.

“I have confidence that the immense majority of the Venezuelan armed forces and the police are going, in the instant that the transition begins, to obey orders, guidelines, instructions from the superiors who will be designated by the civil authority duly elected by Venezuelans,” she said.

Experts have warned that any transition would need to be carefully negotiated with political and military officials to avoid an internal conflict.

Speaking at a briefing earlier this week, Francesca Emanuele, senior policy associate for Latin America at the Center for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR), noted that Maduro’s Chavismo ideology, named after former leader Hugo Chavez, remains a strong political force in Venezuela, while segments of the opposition are also staunchly opposed to US military interventions.

A deeply entrenched system of corruption and patronage will also make many military officials hesitant to change allegiances, she explained.

“The military won’t want to leave the government of Maduro if they don’t have amnesties, if there is no negotiation, so we [could] see a very horrible, devastating conflict in Venezuela that would spread in the region,” she said in reference to a possible US military intervention.

No indication of easing up

For its part, the Trump administration has shown little indication that it planned to alleviate pressure.

Speaking to reporters on Thursday, White House spokesperson Karoline Leavitt would not rule out future seizures of sanctioned vessels off Venezuela’s coast.

On Friday, Reuters news agency reported that Admiral Alvin Holsey, who leads US military forces in Latin America, would retire early.

Three US officials and two people familiar with the matter told the news agency that Holsey was forced out by US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth over frustrations with his response to the Pentagon’s increasingly aggressive strategy in the region.

Holsey has not publicly explained the reason for his retirement.

Antonio bidding to relaunch career at Leicester 12 months after crash

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Striker Michail Antonio will be given a chance to restart his club career in the Championship with Leicester City a year after being involved in a car crash which put his playing future in serious doubt.

The 35-year-old former West Ham forward suffered a badly broken leg, with his femur snapped in four places, after the Ferrari he was driving struck a tree in Epping Forest in December 2024.

He has been training with Leicester this week and is a free agent option for Foxes boss Marti Cifuentes to potentially turn to in the absence of Patson Daka, who will join up with Zambia next week for the Africa Cup of Nations.

“He has looked good and has been a good lad to have around as well,” Cifuentes told BBC East Midlands Today.

    • 16 May
    • 17 June

Antonio was in the final months of his contract with Premier League side West Ham when the single vehicle crash happened late last year.

He spent more than three weeks in hospital after undergoing surgery and has since spoken of the gruelling physical and mental recovery that followed.

He did not regain fitness in time to return to the pitch for West Ham last season and was released at the end of his contract in June.

He did, however, return to action with Jamaica in the summer and remained with West Ham after his contract expired, allowing him to continue his recovery and gain much-needed game time with the club’s Under-21 side.

When asked if Antonio has shown signs of the trauma he has endured in the past year, Cifuentes said: “Not at all.

“We are aware that he has been training before with another club and he is looking good in that sense,” the Spaniard continued.

“Match fitness is what will take some time to learn because he has been away for a long period.

“It’s never easy, and it doesn’t matter how hard you train or how hard you are involved, because the level of the game is different.”

Antonio spent a decade with West Ham and left them as their all-time leading Premier League scorer with 68 goals from 268 games.

The forward, whose career started at non-league level with Tooting & Mitcham United, has scored more than 130 goals across more than 550 appearances since signing his first professional deal with Reading as an 18-year-old.

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  • West Ham United
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Antonio bidding to relaunch career at Leicester 12 months after crash

Getty Images

Striker Michail Antonio will be given a chance to restart his club career in the Championship with Leicester City a year after being involved in a car crash which put his playing future in serious doubt.

The 35-year-old former West Ham forward suffered a badly broken leg, with his femur snapped in four places, after the Ferrari he was driving struck a tree in Epping Forest in December 2024.

He has been training with Leicester this week and is a free agent option for Foxes boss Marti Cifuentes to potentially turn to in the absence of Patson Daka, who will join up with Zambia next week for the Africa Cup of Nations.

“He has looked good and has been a good lad to have around as well,” Cifuentes told BBC East Midlands Today.

    • 16 May
    • 17 June

Antonio was in the final months of his contract with Premier League side West Ham when the single vehicle crash happened late last year.

He spent more than three weeks in hospital after undergoing surgery and has since spoken of the gruelling physical and mental recovery that followed.

He did not regain fitness in time to return to the pitch for West Ham last season and was released at the end of his contract in June.

He did, however, return to action with Jamaica in the summer and remained with West Ham after his contract expired, allowing him to continue his recovery and gain much-needed game time with the club’s Under-21 side.

When asked if Antonio has shown signs of the trauma he has endured in the past year, Cifuentes said: “Not at all.

“We are aware that he has been training before with another club and he is looking good in that sense,” the Spaniard continued.

“Match fitness is what will take some time to learn because he has been away for a long period.

“It’s never easy, and it doesn’t matter how hard you train or how hard you are involved, because the level of the game is different.”

Antonio spent a decade with West Ham and left them as their all-time leading Premier League scorer with 68 goals from 268 games.

The forward, whose career started at non-league level with Tooting & Mitcham United, has scored more than 130 goals across more than 550 appearances since signing his first professional deal with Reading as an 18-year-old.

Related topics

  • Leicester City
  • West Ham United
  • Championship
  • Football

More on this story

  • Leicester City stadium
  • Leicester City crest on a corner flag

Antonio bids to relaunch career at Leicester 12 months after crash

Getty Images

Striker Michail Antonio will be given a chance to restart his club career in the Championship with Leicester City a year after being involved in a car crash which put his playing future in serious doubt.

The 35-year-old former West Ham forward suffered a badly broken leg, with his femur snapped in four places, after the Ferrari he was driving struck a tree in Epping Forest in December 2024.

He has been training with Leicester this week and is a free agent option for Foxes boss Marti Cifuentes to potentially turn to in the absence of Patson Daka, who will join up with Zambia next week for the Africa Cup of Nations.

“He has looked good and has been a good lad to have around as well,” Cifuentes told BBC East Midlands Today.

    • 16 May
    • 17 June

Antonio was in the final months of his contract with Premier League side West Ham when the single vehicle crash happened late last year.

He spent more than three weeks in hospital after undergoing surgery and has since spoken of the gruelling physical and mental recovery that followed.

He did not regain fitness in time to return to the pitch for West Ham last season and was released at the end of his contract in June.

He did, however, return to action with Jamaica in the summer and remained with West Ham after his contract expired, allowing him to continue his recovery and gain much-needed game time with the club’s Under-21 side.

When asked if Antonio has shown signs of the trauma he has endured in the past year, Cifuentes said: “Not at all.

“We are aware that he has been training before with another club and he is looking good in that sense,” the Spaniard continued.

“Match fitness is what will take some time to learn because he has been away for a long period.

“It’s never easy, and it doesn’t matter how hard you train or how hard you are involved, because the level of the game is different.”

Antonio spent a decade with West Ham and left them as their all-time leading Premier League scorer with 68 goals from 268 games.

The forward, whose career started at non-league level with Tooting & Mitcham United, has scored more than 130 goals across more than 550 appearances since signing his first professional deal with Reading as an 18-year-old.

Related topics

  • Leicester City
  • West Ham United
  • Championship
  • Football

More on this story

  • Leicester City stadium
  • Leicester City crest on a corner flag

Antonio bids to relaunch career at Leicester 12 months after crash

Getty Images

Striker Michail Antonio will be given a chance to restart his club career in the Championship with Leicester City a year after being involved in a car crash which put his playing future in serious doubt.

The 35-year-old former West Ham forward suffered a badly broken leg, with his femur snapped in four places, after the Ferrari he was driving struck a tree in Epping Forest in December 2024.

He has been training with Leicester this week and is a free agent option for Foxes boss Marti Cifuentes to potentially turn to in the absence of Patson Daka, who will join up with Zambia next week for the Africa Cup of Nations.

“He has looked good and has been a good lad to have around as well,” Cifuentes told BBC East Midlands Today.

    • 16 May
    • 17 June

Antonio was in the final months of his contract with Premier League side West Ham when the single vehicle crash happened late last year.

He spent more than three weeks in hospital after undergoing surgery and has since spoken of the gruelling physical and mental recovery that followed.

He did not regain fitness in time to return to the pitch for West Ham last season and was released at the end of his contract in June.

He did, however, return to action with Jamaica in the summer and remained with West Ham after his contract expired, allowing him to continue his recovery and gain much-needed game time with the club’s Under-21 side.

When asked if Antonio has shown signs of the trauma he has endured in the past year, Cifuentes said: “Not at all.

“We are aware that he has been training before with another club and he is looking good in that sense,” the Spaniard continued.

“Match fitness is what will take some time to learn because he has been away for a long period.

“It’s never easy, and it doesn’t matter how hard you train or how hard you are involved, because the level of the game is different.”

Antonio spent a decade with West Ham and left them as their all-time leading Premier League scorer with 68 goals from 268 games.

The forward, whose career started at non-league level with Tooting & Mitcham United, has scored more than 130 goals across more than 550 appearances since signing his first professional deal with Reading as an 18-year-old.

Related topics

  • Leicester City
  • West Ham United
  • Championship
  • Football

More on this story

  • Leicester City stadium
  • Leicester City crest on a corner flag