NASCAR drivers would like list of banned drugs UPDATE NASCAR declines :

#39-Ryan Newman wants to know what drug Jeremy Mayfield has been indefinitely suspended for and a list of all drugs that he could be tested for in the future. So do #83-Brian Vickers and #2-Kurt Busch. “I think everyone wants a list right now,'” Newman said Thursday night before the Pit Crew Challenge at Time Warner Cable Arena. Newman said he plans to discuss the situation with NASCAR. He believes there are enough drivers that want a list of drugs that are being tested for that they can present unified front and force the governing body to provide it moving forward. He is concerned because Mayfield said his positive test was the result of combining a prescription drug with an over-the-counter drug, a claim the doctor that evaluated the test denied. Newman said NASCAR has an obligations to the other 42 drivers on the track and “more importantly the fans” to clarify what happened. NASCAR spokesman Ramsey Poston said the policies of not having a list of banned drugs and not revealing what drug was taken could be reevaluated if enough drivers request it. Chairman Brian France is expected to address the policy on Friday at Lowe’s Motor Speedway. “The whole system would be fixed if they just told us what Jeremy did,” Newman said.(ESPN) UPDATE: NASCAR chairman Brian France called Jeremy Mayfield’s positive drug test “a serious violation” of the sport’s toughened new drug policy. France said Friday he considers performance-enhancers and recreational drugs to be serious violations. But a person familiar with Mayfield’s test results told The Associated Press that Mayfield did not test positive for a performance-enhancing drug. That means Mayfield tested positive for a narcotic or a controlled substance, such as cocaine, marijuana or methamphetamine. France would not reveal what Mayfield was caught using, despite a call from several drivers to disclose the drug. “We had a serious violation of our test, our substance-abuse policy, which gets you an automatic and indefinite suspension and that is where we stand with Jeremy,” France said. “We’ve said it’s serious.” France tried to reassure the drivers, explaining proper use of over-the-counter medication and prescriptions won’t lead to NASCAR punishment. “If you should test positive for over-the-counter medications or a prescribed medication that you are on with your doctor, that doesn’t result in NASCAR suspending you,” France said. “You will … be asked to explain why you have a certain substance that was identified in a test. That’s happened a lot, and it doesn’t get you a suspension.”(ESPN/AP)(5-15-2009)