Ottawa – February 24, 2025 – The Canadian Centre for Ethics in Sport (CCES) announced today that Mikal Thrones, a powerlifting athlete, received a five-year sanction for an anti-doping rule violation. The athlete’s urine sample, collected in competition on December 14, 2024, revealed the presence of five prohibited anabolic agents: metandienone, drostanolone, SARM RAD140, SARM LGD-4033, as well as GW501516, which is a prohibited metabolic modulator. The athlete also admitted to the use of BPC-157, a prohibited non-approved substance.
The standard sanction for a violation involving a prohibited substance is a four-year period of ineligibility; however, given the presence of multiple prohibited substances and the athlete’s admitted use, the CCES asserted an additional two-year period for aggravating circumstances. On February 21, 2025, the athlete signed an amended Early Admission and Acceptance of Sanction Agreement, thereby admitting to the violation and accepting the asserted period of ineligibility and all other consequences. As a result, the otherwise applicable six-year period of ineligibility was reduced by one year in accordance with Canadian Anti-Doping Program (CADP) rule 10.8.1. Because a provisional suspension was imposed on the athlete, the sanction ends on January 20, 2030.
During the sanction period, the athlete is ineligible to participate in any capacity with any sport signatory to the CADP or the World Anti-Doping Code, including coaching, serving as an athlete support person, and training with teammates.
In compliance with rule 8.4 of the CADP, the CCES’s file outcome summary can be found in the Canadian Sport Sanction Registry.
About the CCES
The CCES is an independent, national, not-for profit organization that works to protect the integrity of sport, and manages unethical issues in, Canadian sport. Through the administration of its programs, including the CADP and the upcoming Canadian Safe Sport Program, the CCES strives to ensure sport is fair, safe, accessible, and inclusive for all Canadians. Under the CADP rules, the CCES makes public every anti-doping rule violation. For more information, visit cces.ca, follow us on X (Twitter), Facebook or Instagram.
– 30 –