JULY 1 - BRITISH sailors Nick Rogers and Joe Glanfield look set to be forced to compete against a convicted drugs cheat at the Beijing Olympics.

 

Udi Gal, one of their main competitors in the 470 Class, will be able to take part after the Israel Yachting Association (IYA) gave him a reprimand for testing positive for a performance-enhancing drug.

 

Gal can now continue his preparations for Beijing in which he wil compete with partner Gidi Kliger against Rogers and Glanfield, the 2004 Olympic silver medallists.

 

The IYA's committee, which included international sailing judge, Aharon Botzer, veteran sailor, Shmuel Nino and law professor, Dan Mor, determined that Gal unknowingly took the banned substance Finasteride because of an anti-balding medication he was using.

 

Finasteride is a predominant ingredient in the anti-hair loss drug Propecia and is on the World Anti-Doping Agency's banned list because it can mask use of anabolic steroids.

 

Nevertheless, the committee established that Gal had no intention of gaining a competitive advantage unlawfully and should therefore only be warned for failing the drug test.

 

The result was not a surprise as IYA chairman Yehuda Mayan had said last month that Gal should be cleared.

 

Mayan said: "I'm relieved.

 

"In these kinds of cases you can also be suspended.

 

"It's not pleasant to see one of our sportsmen caught up in such a problem which could have even cost him the Olympics."

 

The committee's decision was sent to the International Sailing Federation, which can choose to appeal the ruling.

 

Mayan said: "Usually the ISF doesn't appeal and our committee worked by the international standards."

 

Gal and Kliger have been two of Israel's most successful athletes in recent years.

 

The duo claimed silver medals at the European Championships in 2001 and 2005 and won bronze medals at the World Championships in the last three years.