Casserly takes drug ban to courtBy Dale Miller,
The West Australian
June 11, 2011, 10:13 amSwan Districts will lodge an injunction with the Supreme Court of WA in a desperate bid to allow suspended defender Travis Casserly to play for them this season.
Casserly, 24, is serving a two-year ban after failing a drug test. He was found to have the restricted substance pseudoephedrine in his system after last year's WAFL grand final win over Claremont.
His appeal to have the severity of the ban reduced was dismissed last week by a three-man panel, which upheld the original findings from tribunal chairman Paul Heaney released in February.
Heaney ruled the drug had been taken by Casserly with the intent to enhance sporting performance and applied the maximum ban recommended by the Australian Sports Anti-Doping Authority.
The previous longest ban in sports for a positive pseudoephedrine test anywhere in the world had been six months.
Swans president Peter Harvey confirmed the club would contest the ban at the highest level. Legal documents are to be lodged on Monday.
"We are extremely disturbed at the length of the penalty," Harvey said.
Thewest.com.au understands the injunction could be ruled on as early as next week if the club can sufficiently argue an urgent resolution is required in the best interests of Casserly's welfare on grounds such as financial hardship.
If the injunction is granted, Cass- erly would be allowed to play for Swans while the case is played out in the Supreme Court.
Harvey said the club expected the case to take several months.
The original ruling has already ended the premiership player's hopes of reviving his AFL career after he trained with Richmond in the off-season in a bid to get the Tigers' final rookie position.
Swans will appoint new legal counsel to replace lawyer Simon Watters, who handled Casserly's unsuccessful appeal.
The penalty as it stands prevents Casserly from playing or training with any football club and was backdated to October 18 last year.
As part of their earlier appeal lodged with the WA Football Commission, Swan Districts questioned why a reference to thewest.com.au's report on Brownlow medallist Ben Cousins' new book was cited in Heaney's findings.
Cousins' comments were never raised in the tribunal and weren't published until after the suspension had been imposed.
WAFC umpiring general manager Steve Hargrave, who has been representing the commission, said it was the right of the player and the club to explore the option of going to the Supreme Court.
"We believe that the process has been extremely thorough," Hargrave said.
"It's covered every avenue. It's followed a very, very strict process as outlined by the AFL policy, the WADA (World Anti-Doping Agency) code and our rules and regulations and as such we believe the matter is closed."
Hargrave said the commission could not comment further until it received formal documentation from Swan Districts.
http://au.news.yahoo.com/thewest/sport/a/-/wafl/9623529/casserly-takes-drug-ban-to-court/