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Nascar and Racing

Jeremy Mayfield: 'I Was Worth More ... As A Failed Drug Test'

Jeremy MayfieldIn his first national one-on-one television interview, suspended NASCAR driver Jeremy Mayfield continued to deny drug use and accused NASCAR of using him as a "a good pawn who wasn't going to cost them any money at all.''

Mayfield, who was suspended indefinitely by NASCAR for testing positive in a pair of drug tests this May, made the assertions on ESPN's Outside the Lines show, which will air Sunday at 9 a.m., hours before the green flag drops for the Sprint Cup Series race at Martinsville, Va.

It's been widely reported that the positive test revealed use of methamphetamine, something Mayfield has denied. He claims the tests were a "false positive," the result of his use of Adderall, a prescription drug for attention-hyperactivity disorder, combined with the common allergy medication, Claritin-D.

"You use me as an example to let everybody know who may have already tested positive for marijuana, cocaine, or whatever, that they haven't got anybody for, and it puts the fear of God in everybody in the whole sport,'' Mayfield said in a brief transcript released Friday by ESPN.

"I was worth more to them as a failed drug test then I am as a driver, owner for my own team.''

NASCAR's Managing Director of Corporate Communications, Ramsey Poston said Friday that the sanctioning body had no comment yet and would wait to view the entire interview.

Mayfield, the first Sprint Cup driver to be suspended under a new NASCAR drug testing policy, has tested positive for drugs four times according to NASCAR. The latter two came in July, the same week he was briefly reinstated by an appeals court. Mayfield never raced after his initial suspension May 9 and has sold his team's equipment to help finance his ongoing court battle with NASCAR.

The latest two positive tests allegedly revealed methamphetamine levels consistent with that of a chronic user and Mayfield's stepmother has said she has witnessed the driver use the drug dozens of times in the past 10 years. He says she is lying and has since filed a wrongful death lawsuit against her in the 2007 death of his father.

In the program segment, ESPN asked an expert whether Mayfield's explanation for the false positive was plausible.

"No, they could never be confused for methamphetamine in a confirmation,'' said Dr. Anthony Butch, whose laboratory performs drug testing for U.S. Olympic athletes.

As for his career, Mayfield acknowledges in in the interview that he is finished in NASCAR -- except to be the fall-guy for other marquee drivers, who he says use illegal recreational drugs.

"I wish I could sit here and say, 'No, it's not over,' but realistically, I would have to have a sponsor, or my own team, or find a ride, and all of those are virtually impossible with the baggage that comes along with me now,'' he said.

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