The crackdown on doping offenders in the run-up to the London Olympics has been a success, the President, International Olympic Committee (IOC), Jacques Rogge, said on Friday.
Rogge said that this was after testers caught more than a 100 athletes using performance-enhancing drugs in recent months.
Hours before the Opening Ceremony of the 2012 Games, Rogge said the IOC’s efforts for a clean Olympics were bearing fruit.
On July 25, nine track and field athletes were handed lengthy bans by the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF), for doping violations.
Separately, women's 1,500 metres medal contender, Mariem Selsouli of Morocco and Greece's world indoor high jump champion, Dimitris Chondrokoukis, were also confirmed to have tested positive this week, before arriving in London.
“This is a good sign for the fight against doping. This is proof that the system is working and is effective,” Rogge told reporters.
The nine athletes were all caught by the IAAF with the aid of the Athlete Biological Passport programme which tracks athletes' blood data over time, to note any abnormalities.
The banned athletes included leading marathon runner, Moroccan Abderrahim Goumri,
Rogge said that while not all sports could immediately benefit from this system due to their nature, he would like the programme to be extended.
“It is a fact that there is no blood passport in all sports. It is also true, however, that blood profile is a powerful tool that has to expand and reach more countries,” Rogge said.
“I am happy that the blood profile has led to positive tests. It is a powerful deterrent,” Rogge, an advocate of zero tolerance for doping offenders added.
There will be around 6,250 samples analysed at the Games, more than any other Olympics, while U.K. Anti-Doping has also been mandated to test in pre-competition training camps.
There were 20 proven cases of doping at the Beijing Games four years ago, including six horses, down from 26 cases in Athens in 2004.