Rillington wrote:
Concluding, we need to believe this:
- An elite athlete has no idea which are the banned illegal substances that appear on anti-doping lists; substances which would likely trigger a doping violation.
- An elite athlete may have no idea (and take no interest) as to the substances which have caused other athletes to fail doping controls even from public media reports.
Okay!
I don't expect you or "we" to believe anything. I was asked if I "honestly believed she had to google nandrolone".
I think I agree with how Andy Brown from SportsIntegrityInitiative put it:
But for many athletes, anti-doping just doesn’t exist until it happens to them. Most athletes support life bans until they discover that you can ‘test positive’ due contaminated food, water, or even for kissing another person.
Have you read the banned doping list -- there must be hundreds of drugs on the list with exotic scientific names and greek letters.
Hearing reports of other athletes, I suspect most athletes may just take away that someone was busted for anabolic steroids, but quickly forget exactly which one.
As someone said above, nandrolone is more a sprinter/body-builder/weightlifter drug. It's not obvious to me that distance running athletes or coaches would have or should have ever heard of it, or recognized it by its name.