NL MVP Ryan Braun said all along that his 50-game suspension for a positive drug test would be overturned. He was right.
Arbitrator Shyam Das threw out Braun's ban on Thursday, making the
Milwaukee Brewers outfielder the first Major League Baseball player to
successfully challenge a drug-related penalty in a grievance.
"It is the first step in restoring my good name and reputation," Braun
said. "We were able to get through this because I am innocent and the
truth is on our side."
Braun tested positive in October for elevated testosterone, which was
revealed by ESPN in December. He reports Friday to spring training with
the threat of suspension lifted.
"Since joining our organization in 2005, Ryan Braun has been a model
citizen and a person of character and integrity. Knowing Ryan as I do, I
always believed he would succeed in his appeal," Brewers owner Mark
Attanasio said. "It is unfortunate that the confidentiality of the
program was compromised, and we thank our fans and everyone who
supported Ryan and did not rush to judgment."
Braun's sample was collected on Oct. 1, a Saturday and the day the
Brewers opened the NL playoffs. The collector did not send the sample to
the laboratory until Monday, thinking it would be more secure at home
than at a Federal Express office during the weekend.
Baseball's drug agreement states that "absent unusual circumstances, the
specimens should be sent by FedEx to the laboratory on the same day
they are collected."
MLB executive vice president Rob Manfred said management "vehemently disagrees" with Das' decision.
Travis Tygart, chief executive officer of the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency, called the decision "a real gut-kick to clean athletes."
During the hearing, Braun's side challenged the chain of custody from
the time the urine sample was collected by Comprehensive Drug Testing
Inc. to when it was sent, nearly 48 hours later, to a World Anti-Doping
Agency-certified laboratory in Montreal, two people familiar with the
case said. They spoke on condition of anonymity because what took place
in the hearing is supposed to be confidential.
"To have this sort of technicality of all technicalities let a player
off ... it's just a sad day for all the clean players and those that
abide by the rules within professional baseball," Tygart said.
Das, who has been baseball's independent arbitrator since 2000, informed
the sides of his decision but did not give them a written opinion. He
has 30 days to do so.
Technically, the decision was on a 2-1 vote. Manfred and union head
Michael Weiner are part of the arbitration panel, and management and the
union almost always split their votes, leaving Das, the independent
panel member, to make the decision.
"MLB and cable sports tried to sully the reputation of an innocent man,"
Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers said on Twitter. "Picked
the wrong guy to mess with. Truth will set u free"
An evidentiary hearing on Braun's appeal was held Jan. 19-20 in New
York, ending the day before the player accepted the NL MVP award at a
black-tie dinner.
"We provided complete cooperation throughout, despite the highly unusual
circumstances. I have been an open book, willing to share details from
every aspect of my life as part of this investigation, because I have
nothing to hide," Braun said in his statement. "I have passed over 25
drug tests in my career, including at least three in the past year."
Via:Abc
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| Friday, February 24, 2012