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Rugby doping scandal sees six Georgia players get long bans, including one for 11 years

Sport

Rugby doping scandal sees six Georgia players get long bans, including one for 11 years
Sport

Sport

Rugby doping scandal sees six Georgia players get long bans, including one for 11 years

2026-05-13 03:32 Last Updated At:03:49

DUBLIN (AP) — Six players from Georgia’s rugby team have been handed long bans — including one for 11 years — for their involvement in a urine-swapping scheme to cheat anti-doping tests in one of the sport's biggest corruption scandals.

The case was described by World Rugby on Tuesday as “the most extensive anti-doping investigation ever undertaken in rugby."

It's resulted in Georgia's entire anti-doping agency being replaced with new staff as the World Anti-Doping Agency checks if other sports were affected in the former Soviet nation.

Former captain Merab Sharikadze was given the 11-year ban, while Giorgi Chkoidze was banned for six years, and Lasha Khmaladze, Otar Lashkhi and Miriani Modebadze received three-year suspensions. Lasha Lomidze was banned for nine months.

Nutsa Shamatava, the national team's doctor, was banned for nine years for her role in the scandal, where she provided advance notice of upcoming out-of-competition doping controls to players in group chats.

Georgia had been a rugby success story. It has the top-ranked men's team in Europe outside of the Six Nations, and attracts big crowds to home games, bucking a trend of rugby struggling to put down roots outside its traditional heartlands.

World Rugby said it discovered irregularities in urine samples in the run-up to the men’s Rugby World Cup in France in 2023 and alerted the World Anti-Doping Agency. Three of the six players were named in the World Cup squad. A fourth withdrew “on medical grounds” before the tournament, World Rugby said at the time.

Their joint investigation found the six players “engaged in swapping of urine samples to avoid the risk of testing positive for substances that they believed were prohibited, the former men’s first team doctor provided advance notice of testing and other members of staff arguably were or ought to be have been aware that such advance notice was provided,” read a summary in the independent report of the case.

World Rugby said the investigation revealed no evidence that the urine samples were substituted to conceal the use of performance-enhancing substances.

Instead, the governing body said there was “credible evidence” to support assertions by the six players that they concealed cannabis and a painkiller, tramadol.

The Georgia Rugby Union accepted a misconduct charge, World Rugby added, and agreed to an undisclosed financial penalty and to implement “a roadmap of various reforms and measures in its anti-doping training and education to mitigate the risk of any future issues of this nature arising.”

WADA said the Georgia government has “withdrawn its recognition” of the national anti-doping agency after its employees were accused of helping to provide advance notice of tests. A new body is being set up with “entirely different personnel,” WADA added.

Other sports could come under scrutiny, too.

“We are now in the next phase of this investigation as we assess whether the issues in Georgian rugby go beyond that of one sport,” said Günter Younger, WADA's director of intelligence and investigations.

AP rugby: https://apnews.com/hub/rugby

FILE - Georgia's Merab Sharikadze during the Rugby World Cup Pool C match between Georgia and Portugal at the Stadium de Toulouse in Toulouse, France, Sept. 23, 2023. (AP Photo/Lewis Joly, File)

FILE - Georgia's Merab Sharikadze during the Rugby World Cup Pool C match between Georgia and Portugal at the Stadium de Toulouse in Toulouse, France, Sept. 23, 2023. (AP Photo/Lewis Joly, File)

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Charle Young, an All-Pro tight end who helped the San Francisco 49ers win their first Super Bowl title, has died.

He was 75.

The 49ers said Tuesday they were told of Young's death by his wife. No cause of death was disclosed.

Young played 13 seasons in the NFL for Philadelphia, the Los Angeles Rams, San Francisco and Seattle, with his greatest individual success coming with the Eagles before he later joined the 49ers and helped launch the dynasty started by Hall of Fame coach Bill Walsh.

Young was picked sixth overall out of Southern California by Philadelphia in 1973 and made the Pro Bowl his first three seasons with the Eagles. He was an All-Pro as a rookie when he had 55 catches for 854 yards and six TDs and was a second-team All-Pro the following two seasons.

He then played for the Rams from 1977-79, helping Los Angeles reach the Super Bowl his final season there when he had three catches for 39 yards in the NFC title game win against Tampa Bay.

He then joined the 49ers the following season when Joe Montana took over as starting quarterback in Walsh's second season as coach. Young had 37 catches for 400 yards and five TDs in 1981 when San Francisco won its first of five Super Bowls in 14 seasons.

Young scored the first playoff touchdown of that dynasty when he caught a TD pass from Montana in a divisional round win against the New York Giants. He added four more catches in the NFC championship game against Dallas and had another in the Super Bowl against Cincinnati.

He spent one more year in San Francisco before finishing his career with three seasons in Seattle.

Young finished his career with 418 catches for 5,106 yards and 27 touchdowns in 187 games. He ranked seventh among all tight ends in receptions and 11th in yards receiving at the time he retired following the 1985 season.

Young also had a stellar college career, helping USC win a national title in 1972 when he was selected an AP All-American. Young had 62 catches for 998 yards and 10 TDs in three seasons for the Trojans and was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 2004.

AP NFL: https://apnews.com/hub/NFL

FILE - San Francisco 49ers tight end Charle Young (86) holds on to a Joe Montana pass as he is tackled by Cincinnati Bengals Jim LeClair and Bo Harris in the first quarter of the NFL Super Bowl 16 football game on Jan. 24, 1982, in Pontiac, Mich. (AP Photo/Rusty Kennedy, File)

FILE - San Francisco 49ers tight end Charle Young (86) holds on to a Joe Montana pass as he is tackled by Cincinnati Bengals Jim LeClair and Bo Harris in the first quarter of the NFL Super Bowl 16 football game on Jan. 24, 1982, in Pontiac, Mich. (AP Photo/Rusty Kennedy, File)

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