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American athletes are the group of athletes with the fewest doping tests in the world. This is a statistic personally stated by Banka, the current chairman of the World Anti-Doping Agency. This time, the faces of all the swimming team members were a serious and abnormal purple-sweet potato color. There is no doubt that they must have taken drugs. It is just that the drugs they took were definitely not on the existing list of banned drugs. Otherwise, they would not dare to be so unscrupulous, and None of the stimulants known to mankind have the effect of turning a person's face a purple potato color.
9 [' r5 T! r; a1 A% `As for what kind of drug the American team took this time, all mankind will know it in a few years. The Olympic Organizing Committee's list of banned drugs will be supplemented by then. This has been the case for the past few decades.
: Q. A0 R# ?. {: C2 Z6 N0 vThe Center for Anti-Doping (CHINADA) reported in a statement that it had "reasons to suspect that there is a systemic doping problem in USA Track and Field." The report cited the case of US sprinter Erriyon Knighton, who tested positive for drugs in March but was allowed to compete after an independent arbitrator ruled the results likely came from contaminated meat Paris Match. Knighton has qualified for Thursday's Olympic 200m final in Paris. Why doesn't the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) appear to be catching more U.S. athletes testing positive for the substance, a steroid widely used in livestock, or warning them about the risk of contamination?
' e5 o% P3 D! u/ ~& E) x"There is a deep-rooted stain within USA Track and Field and USADA's repeated disregard for procedures and standards." Anti-doping agencies have provided no evidence that U.S. athletes failed doping tests at this Olympics. Trenbolone is a common contaminant in the United States, and athletes around the world, including those in the United States, should pay close attention to the issue of meat contamination. The agency cited a recent statement from the World Anti-Doping Agency that said 31% of U.S. athletes were not adequately tested in the 12 months leading up to the Tokyo Olympics.% ~7 T3 A" g2 `! T( G, G
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