Denne historie er på engelsk og kopieret fra Eurosport.
Den handler om at den nye doping kontrol i tennis, som nogle spillere mener behandler dem som kriminelle.
De ska' stille 1 time til rådighed til potentiel doping-kontrol HVER dag.
Dvs de ska' fortælle hvor de er hver dag så doping-kontrollen ka' kontrollere dem hvis de vil. Det mener blandt andet Nadal, verdens-etteren, er en overdrevet indgribning i privat-livet.
http://eurosport.yahoo.com/13022009/58/nadal-re-treated-criminals.htmlCitat:
Nadal: We're treated like criminals
Eurosport - Fri, 13 Feb 09:44:00 2009
The new dope testing regime in tennis treats players like criminals, according to world number one Rafael Nadal.
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The Spaniard is leading criticism against the procedure adopted by the ATP, which signed the World Anti-Doping agency (WADA) protocol last year.
"It is not fair to have persecution like that," Nadal said at the World Indoor Tournament in Rotterdam.
From the start of this year, players ranked in the top 50 must nominate one hour daily when they will be available for testing, as per WADA regulations.
However, Nadal, Andy Murray and Gilles Simon have all claimed that it is harassment of tennis players.
"They make you feel like a criminal," Nadal said. "Not even my mother knows where I am every day. It is very difficult to know where you are going to be tomorrow especially in a sport like tennis."
The tighter dope control is a result of tennis being an Olympic sport, but Nadal wonders if it is worth it.
"Sure we want to be an Olympic sport, but I think we don't want to pay a price like this for an Olympic sport," he said.
"I am the first one who wants a fair competition, completely clean competition for everybody but the forms can be totally different."
French world number eight Simon almost missed an out-of-competition test while at home in Paris.
"I rescheduled a training session at Roland Garros and went to the zoo with my girlfriend, but I was called by the controller and just returned in time," he said.
Briton Murray hoped the testing could be simplified. "I just wish that the out-of-competition testing was done in the off-season and then they just test us at every single tournament," he said.
"Then that's fine, we could get tested 30 times a year. I think that's enough to know whether someone's trying to cheat or not."
If a player misses three tests in 18 months they could face a two-year ban.
Murray and Simon felt tennis could not be compared with other sports as it involved constant travel.
"You have to fill in a three-month form, but if you are knocked out in a tournament and decide to travel the next day, you have to change it immediately," said Simon.
A player tested after his final match in a tournament can return home the next day and face an out-of-competition test, something which happened to Murray after the Australian Open.
"I got a visit at 7am, hours after I came back from Australia. I woke up not really knowing where I was," he said.
"There has to be a more realistic and practical way to deal with the problem with tennis players."
Reuters
Min egen mening er at dette klart viser at det er blevet et meget skingert og hysterisk system der ser narko og doping og stoffer alle vegne.
Og som har fået kontrol-liderlighed på hjernen ganske enkelt.