Doping: Adidas cuts cash for Germany's anti-doping body

Oct 25, 2016

"In all contracts with our athletes, it's made clear we will terminate the contractual relationship immediately in the event of a proven doping offence."

Germany's National Anti-Doping Agency (NADA) suffered a blow on Tuesday with Adidas announcing it will cut 300,000 euros ($326,655) of funding by the end of the year.

"We have already informed the National Anti-Doping Agency that in the spring, we will no longer provide financial support beyond our existing contract, which runs out at the end of 2016," Adidas' spokesman Oliver Brueggen told SID, an AFP subsidiary.

"We would like to remain connected to NADA and are therefore currently in talks about alternative forms of co-operation.

"Of course, Adidas will continue to maintain a clear stance in the fight against doping.

"In all contracts with our athletes, it's made clear we will terminate the contractual relationship immediately in the event of a proven doping offence."

But the loss of sportswear giants Adidas -- NADA's only sponsor from Germany's industry -- is clearly a blow for the country's anti-doping body.

"We are very sorry that we will lose one of our main partners in all probability,"  NADA's managing director Lars Mortsiefer told German daily Bild.

Neither Brueggen nor Mortsiefer gave a clear reason why Adidas are withdrawing the funding.

At a time when the fight against doping is regularly in the headlines, the withdrawn sponsorship of a global brand like Adidas has raised eyebrows here.

"Obviously, sport and business are of the opinion that the financing of NADA is largely a matter for the state," politician Dagmar Freitag, chairman of the Bundestag's sports committee, told Bild.

"But when the question arises of NADA's foundation model, it can now be safely dismissed as a failure."

But Sylvia Schenk, the ex-president of the German Cycling Federation and leader of the sports work group at Transparency International, says recent evidence of mass doping in countries like Russia prove efforts to catch those doping are not foolproof.

"Obviously, the business world is not convinced by the concept of anti-doping controls. Events this summer have shown that the testing systems do not work," said Schenk.

"Now the sports federations themselves and politics are also being asked about this."

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