Cousins reference might help banned WAFL playerBy Craig O'Donoghue
The West Australian
March 15, 2011A reference to Ben Cousins in an article published by The West Australian two days after Swan Districts premiership player Travis Casserly was suspended for two years will form a key plank in the club's evidence at their appeal next month.
Swan Districts have been poring over Magistrate Paul Heaney's 12- page document which lists his reasons for suspending Casserly on February 28. Casserly tested positive to pseudoephedrine after last year's WAFL grand final after taking two Sudafed tablets.
Casserly said he took the tablets to treat hayfever, but Heaney declared Casserly used the drug to enhance his performance.
"He took the Sudafed tablets and he knew he was taking them with the intent to enhance his sporting performance," Heaney wrote.
Swan Districts' grounds for appeal include 13 points.
But Heaney's reference to _The West Australian _'s report about Cousins' book on March 2 will provide the most intrigue.
"Legal drugs were part and parcel of a footballer's routine," Cousins wrote in My Life Story.
"Taking caffeine was a way of manufacturing an alert sharp state for a match.
"It wouldn't guarantee you'd play well but it stacked the odds in your favour.
"Then there was Sudafed which was widely used in the AFL. The pseudoephedrine pepped you up for those games when you weren't quite sharp."
Swan Districts will argue that Cousins' comments were never raised in the tribunal and weren't published in _The West Australian _until after the suspension had been announced.
They will also question whether an autobiography can be used as a legal reference.
"We were surprised that the chairman would have used that to reach his decision," Swan Districts football operations manager Phil Smart said.
The club is also arguing that pseudoephedrine is a controlled substance, not a banned drug.
Players are allowed to have 150 micrograms per millilitre in their system but Casserly's A sample had 240.
The club intends to use Russian athlete Anna Alminova's three-month ban last year as a precedent to show the two-year suspension is excessive.
Swan Districts will also argue that Casserly did not perform beyond expectations during the game and he only intended to treat hayfever by taking the drug.
The club wants Casserly's suspension cut to three months, and backdated to October 18.
He hasn't been allowed to train with Swan Districts since testing positive, so that would become his punishment.
But the appeal won't be held in time to revive Casserly's AFL career. He had been training with Richmond, but the club must use their final rookie selection today.
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