Soccer: FIFA, UEFA reject WADA drug-testing rule
Associated Press
COPENHAGEN — The two most powerful soccer organizations have rejected the World Anti-Doping Agency's out-of-competition drug testing rule and are asking for changes.
The WADA rule requires athletes in all sports to give drug testers three months' notice of their whereabouts for one hour each day of the year. FIFA and UEFA say there are "fundamental differences" between an individual athlete training alone and one who spends six days a week at a stadium and is "easy to locate."
In a statement after Tuesday's UEFA Executive Committee meeting in Copenhagen, the two groups asked WADA to reconsider the rule "in a spirit of collaboration in the fight against doping."