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West Coast's Willie Rioli tampered with urine twice, cops two-year ban

Willie Rioli has escaped with a two-year AFL ban despite being found guilty of substituting his urine during two separate anti-doping drug tests.

Rioli, who has been provisionally suspended since September 12, 2019, was facing a ban of up to four years for the urine substitution charge.

The football world had been made aware of Rioli's urine substitution charge stemming from an out-of-competition test on August 20, 2019.

But the AFL anti-doping tribunal dropped a bombshell on Thursday when they revealed Rioli had also tampered with his urine sample on September 5, 2019 - a post-match anti-doping test in which he also tested positive to a metabolite of cannabis.

Rioli had faced an agonising 18-month wait to find out his fate and the two-year ban handed down by the AFL anti-doping tribunal on Thursday means the star goalsneak's AFL career is still well and truly alive.

Sports Integrity Australia (formerly ASADA) and the World Anti-Doping Agency decided against appealing the decision.

The ban will be backdated to August 20, 2019 - the day of the first infraction.

It means Rioli can return to playing duties on August 20 this year.

He will be allowed to train with West Coast from June 20.

Rioli's quick admission of guilt to the tampering charges resulted in his ban being heavily reduced from the maximum four years he was facing.

"This was determined by the Tribunal to be a period of ineligibility which is proportionate to the seriousness of the allegations and Willie's degree of fault after taking into account all relevant circumstances, including Willie's prompt admission to the violations and the absence of any intention by Willie to cheat by gaining a performance enhancing," the findings said.

The AFL Players' Association expressed concern at the length of time it took for an outcome to be reached and they have implored Sports Integrity Australia to conduct a review of its processes.

"The time it takes for an athlete to progress through this system places significant strain on their mental health and wellbeing, as well as that of their family," AFLPA general manager of legal and player affairs James Gallagher said.

"Identifying ways to expedite the process and taking a more reasoned approach will also help to avoid the potential situation where an athlete is forced to serve a provisional suspension that is greater than that of the final decision of the tribunal.

"With recent reductions to some penalties under the anti-doping rules, this is now even more paramount."

Rioli played a key role in the club's 2018 premiership campaign and he took his game to an even higher level in 2019.

But he was provisionally suspended on the eve of the club's semi-final loss to Geelong in 2019 for a urine substitution charge relating to an out-of-competition drug test on August 20 that year.

It was later revealed Rioli had also tested positive for a metabolite of cannabis after the Eagles' elimination-final win over Essendon on September 5, 2019.

Rioli had to wait 15 months to get his chance to state his case at the AFL anti-doping tribunal and it's taken another three months for a finding to be handed down.

AFL chief executive Gillon McLachlan was among the critics to express their frustration at how long the process was taking.

AFL ANTI-DOPING TRIBUNAL FINDINGS

*Use of a prohibited method by Rioli, namely urine substitution during the course of the doping control/sample collection process on 20 August 2019

*Presence of the metabolite of a Prohibited Substance (namely cannabis) in a sample collected from Rioli on 5 September 2019

*Use of a prohibited method by Rioli, namely urine substitution during the doping control/sample collection process on 5 September 2019.