This Heradia's statement has been taken too lightly. I don't think you have many Jamaicans on this board as what happened in 2009 with athletes testing positive at their National Trials is an indication that it is backed by the state.
Notice in his recent interview, he kept mentioning "The Jamaicans". The article was focused on Jamaican " Male Sprinters".
Jamaicans had sub par performances at the 2007 WC in Tokyo. Notice the turn around in 2008.
The 2008 Beijing retests has opened up a floodgate of suspicions.
These are the two scenarios which I know will never see the light of day:
1.If Bolt's sample was in the mix along with the other top sprinters, this points to a state doping program.
2. The other scenarios surrounds a group of male sprinters from a prominent local club who would have their European camp base in Italy( Clenbuterol). The same group that won the most gold medals in Berlin and they had 3 out of 4 reps on the men's 4*100 team.
See Stories below about the 2009 Adverse Findings. All from different training clubs.
https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2009/sep/15/jamaica-athletes-banned-drug
Four Jamaican runners who admitted using a banned substance have each been suspended for three months.
The bans for Yohan Blake, Lansford Spence, Marvin Anderson and Allodin Fothergill took effect immediately after a sentencing hearing yesterday assembled by Jamaica's sports ministry.
https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2009/sep/15/jamaica-athletes-banned-drug
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The cruel irony, according to Malcolm, was that the sample taken from Brooks at the trials, which produced the positive test, resulted from ingredients found in a supplement drink she ingested following the 100 metres.
"She couldn't have been seeking an edge because she took it after the race," he explained. "She took it while in the doping room waiting her turn."
The "it" was a drink, Malcolm said, similar to supplements Brooks had taken for years. Normally, she would travel with the powdered form and mix it with water, he explained. It helped her recover. Brooks, he said, chose to take the liquid form of a similar product to Jamaica and drank it to aid her recovery for the upcoming 200 metres.
The sprinter's support team, including Malcolm and her agent Kris Mychasiw, said they checked the contents of the drink, bought in a US store, and there was no indication it contained any substance on the banned list issued by the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) or the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF).
According to Malcolm, while using the powder and water-mixed version of the supplement, Brooks had been tested several times in Europe leading up to the trials with no positive result for a banned substance. In addition, he argued, the supplement Brooks drank at the trials tested positive for a substance not on the banned list, but was determined a member of "a family of what was on the WADA list".
None of that cushioned the jolt to Brooks, who got the bad news in July 2009, just weeks from WCA.
"She was in shock," said Malcolm, who has coached Brooks since 2000. "She couldn't believe it was happening to her."
The sprinter's team swore her innocence. A bundled administrative process of getting Brooks's "B" - or back-up - sample tested in Canada helped her case.
Eventually, the Appeals Tribunal of the Jamaica Anti-Doping Commission (JADCO), the local body which monitors doping in Jamaica, cleared Brooks.
"We were unable to impose a sanction on her, as there was an irregularity with the testing of the "B" sample that was raised by her counsel," Kent Gammon, JADCO's head of the disciplinary committee, explained in published statements. "Therefore, we were unable to conclude that she was guilty of an offence."
But freedom from the doping charges came at a hefty price. The JADCO hearings wore Brooks down.
"That took a lot of toll on her mentally," said Malcolm, "thinking about what was going on."
http://jamaica-gleaner.com/gleaner/20130814/sports/sports3.html