ARTICLE
2 July 2024

Sport – B P Collins Advises National Level Boxer

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BP Collins

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B P Collins, established in 1966 by Brian P Collins, is a distinguished, multi-award-winning law firm offering top-tier legal services to individuals, families, and businesses. With over 50 years of expertise, the firm excels in both commercial and private client work, fostering a cohesive and evolving team dynamic. Many of its practice groups are consistently ranked at the top in renowned legal directories like Chambers HNW, Chambers UK, and The Legal 500. Individual lawyers are often recognized as leaders in their fields or as next-generation talent.

The firm’s approach is deeply rooted in its core values of ambition, diversity, and innovation, with a strong commitment to Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion (EDI). B P Collins is consistently recognized for its excellence, having been named in The Times Best Law Firms since 2022.

B P Collins' sports lawyers advised a national boxer on an alleged ‘whereabouts failure' due to an unupdated training schedule. The error, explained and accepted as a first offense, had no formal consequences but highlighted the severe impacts of anti-doping breaches.
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Sports lawyers in B P Collins' wider dispute resolution group recently advised a national level boxer in connection with an alleged 'whereabouts failure'.

Regardless of nationality or sport, professional athletes are generally subject to very strict requirements to account for their physical 'whereabouts' months in advance. A failure can mean without-notice anti-doping tests are missed or cannot be completed, and many anti-doping regimes operate a 'three strike' policy – three 'missed tests' or other 'filing failures' in a 12-month period can lead to an athlete being charged with an anti-doping offence, facing a significant ban, with career impacting consequences.

In this case, the issue arose through simple error – a whereabouts record was not updated after an additional day was added to a pre-scheduled training camp. With the benefit of advice, the error was explained, accepted, and identified as a first offence; and it did not result in any formal consequence.

The consequences of these sorts of failings can be serious, impacting not only an ability to continue training and competing but potentially impacting sponsorship arrangements. Applying similar rules in October last year, US player Jenson Brooksby was banned for 18 months after a tribunal found he had committed three 'whereabouts' failures in a 12 month period – the last of which occurred while he was in a hotel room under an assumed name, leaving doping control officers unable to locate him within the testing window.

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