AJ Allmendinger suspended after positive substance abuse test
July 7, 2012
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
DAYTONA
BEACH, Fla. -- AJ Allmendinger, driver of the No. 22 Penske Racing
Dodge, has been suspended temporarily from NASCAR competition after his
"A" sample from a random drug test administered last weekend at Kentucky
tested positive for a banned substance.
The
suspension keeps Allmendinger out of Saturday night's Coke Zero 400 at
Daytona International Speedway. Sam Hornish Jr., who drives in the
NASCAR Nationwide Series for Penske Racing, was tabbed to replace
Allmendinger in Saturday's race.
NASCAR
senior vice president of racing operations Steve O'Donnell announced
the suspension Saturday afternoon at the Daytona media center.
Allmendinger has 72 hours from the date of his suspension to request
that his "B" sample be tested.
If
Allmendinger does not request a "B" sample test, or if the "B" sample
tests positive, Allmendinger will be suspended indefinitely pending
completion of NASCAR's Road to Recovery program.
"Out of respect for the process, we're not going to take any questions at this time," O'Donnell concluded.
Penske Racing issued the following statement:
"NASCAR
notified Penske Racing this afternoon that AJ Allmendinger was
administered a drug test earlier this week, and those results tested
positive. NASCAR has a strict drug testing program that Penske Racing
fully supports.
"Penske
Racing will work with NASCAR through this process and its next steps.
Sam Hornish will drive the No. 22 car in (Saturday's) Coke Zero 400."
As O'Donnell read NASCAR's statement to reporters, Hornish was on his way to Daytona by plane from Charlotte.
Allmendinger did not attend the 5:30 p.m. ET driver's meeting at Daytona, fueling speculation that something was amiss.
Though
17 races in his first season with Penske, Allmendinger is 23rd in the
standings with three top-10 finishes, two in the last two races.
Allmendinger
is the second Sprint Cup driver to fail a drug test under a toughened
substance abuse policy NASCAR introduced at the beginning of the 2009
season. Jeremy Mayfield was suspended indefinitely May 9, 2009 at
Darlington for a failed test at Richmond the week before.
Mayfield
subsequently claimed that his positive test for methamphetamine
resulted from a combination of over-the-counter and prescription drugs.
Mayfield took NASCAR to court over the issue but eventually exhausted
his legal options, without success.
As
a practice, NASCAR does not reveal the nature of the substance or
substances that produce a positive test. The specifics of Mayfield's
case came to light in court filings.
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