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Drug violation threatens Canadian show jumping team's entry into Tokyo 2020

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Canada's participation in show jumping at the 2020 Olympic Games is in peril because of a doping infraction at the Pan American Games.

Canadian rider Nicole Walker has been provisionally suspended by equestrian's world governing body for testing positive for a cocaine metabolite at this year's Pan Am Games in Lima, Peru.

After finishing fourth in the individual event aboard Falco van Spieveld, Walker and other riders paced fourth in the team event to qualify Canada for next summer's Olympic team event in Tokyo.

The 26-year-old from Aurora, Ont., tested positive for the cocaine metabolite Benzoylecgonine on the day of the team final Aug. 7, according to an FEI statement issued Tuesday.

Cocaine is a banned stimulant under World Anti-Doping Agency rules.

"I do not use illicit drugs, ever," Walker said in a separate statement issued by a public relations firm. "I was shocked and devastated to hear about these results."

Walker declined an interview request via the PR firm.

The Pan Ams were Canada's last chance to join the Tokyo field and a top-four result was required in Lima.

"Whether in Peru, or in any competition setting for that matter, I am always fully aware of the possibility of being tested and would never expose myself to any substance that could test positive," Walker said.

"My Canadian teammates, my team in the barn, our horses and I, have all put a lifetime of effort towards an Olympic goal and I would never do anything to jeopardize that for my teammates or for myself."

Show jumping team chef d'Equipe Mark Laskin told The Canadian Press the team's Pan Am result has not yet been disqualified.

That would not happen before Walker has a hearing with the Panam Sports Disciplinary Commission.

"I'm pushing forward with our plans with that in mind," Laskin said.

Walker can also apply to an FEI tribunal to have her provisional suspension lifted.

Laskin believes Walker is innocent of wrongdoing.

"I know Nikki to be serious, focused, committed, very intelligent," he said.

"She has a great deal of integrity and I one hundred per cent unwaveringly believe her. She would never do anything knowingly to jeopardize her career or our team."

Walker is the daughter of Belinda Stronach, president and chairman of The Stronach Group and former member of Parliament from 2004 to 2008.

"Nikki has dedicated her whole life to the sport she loves. She would never do anything to jeopardize that," Stronach said in a statement. 

"I love her and support her, not only because I'm her mother, but because she has great integrity and is incredibly loyal, dedicated and honest.

"I'm confident that there is another explanation for this and fully stand behind her."

Laskin said he was with Walker when she was summoned for drug testing in Lima.

"I introduced the tester to her and I saw her reaction. If she'd had something to hide, I'm sure there would have been a change in her demeanour, her energy," he recalled. "There was nothing. She was calm."

He wonders if Peru's staple drink, coca leaf tea brewed from coca plant leaves, could have produced Walker's adverse test result.

Alkaloids from coca plant leaves can be chemically extracted to concoct cocaine.

While coca and coca leaves are illegal in Canada under the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act, coca tea is legal and consumed in several South American countries.

Coca tea is considered an altitude sickness remedy in the Peruvian Andes.

"It's readily available at most hotels in Lima," Laskin said. "I know Nikki is a tea drinker. She does not drink coffee. It seems like a plausible explanation to me."

Her Pan Am teammates Mario Deslauriers of Bromont, Que., and Lisa Carlsen of Okotoks, Alta., believe Walker is blameless.

"I got to know her this past year because we were on a couple teams together," Carlsen said. "Nikki is no part of a drug user."

Said Deslauriers: "I truly believe what she has said. I think all our Canadian team members believe she has not done anything wrong."

Both Deslauriers and Carlsen say they drank coffee, not tea, in Lima. They don't recall any warnings from Canadian team staff about the risks of coca tea.

Walker is the second Canadian 2020 hopeful mired in a doping scandal.

World sprint canoe champion Laurence Vincent-Lapointe of Trois-Rivieres, Que., is appealing a positive test for the muscle-building substance Ligandrol in August.

She too was provisionally suspended by the international governing body of her sport.

Canada finished fourth in team show jumping at the 2016 Rio Games.

Walker's Pan Am teammate Eryn Ballard of Tottenham and decorated Canadian riders Ian Millar and Eric expressed support for her in the statement Tuesday.

"There is zero, and I mean zero chance of Nikki ever putting herself or her teammates in harm's way," said Miller, a 10-time Olympian who retired from the national team this year.

"She is a very serious and highly disciplined equestrian rider. As early as 16 years of age, Nikki caught my attention. Instinctively, I recognized that she had the right stuff.

"Nikki continued to develop into the highly skilled and professional rider that she is today. She has represented Canada with honour and distinction."

Equestrian Canada said it is committed to clean sport.

"We also believe in standing behind our athletes, and fully support Nicole during this challenging situation," the organization said in a statement.

"EC will be working closely with Nicole and her legal team as appropriate next steps are determined."

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 12, 2019.

Donna Spencer, The Canadian Press

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