The blood test results of Paula Radcliffe (picture), which the marathon record holder says prove she is innocent of doping, have been revealed.

The results have been made public by Sky News and the three “off-scores” were 114.86, 109.86 and 109.3 – Press Association Sport said the figures to be correct.

Scores above 103 by a female athlete can be regarded as “suspicious” but training at altitude and tests taken immediately after a race can lead to higher results.

Radcliffe said the results had been looked at by an independent expert and she had reports clearing her.

She said: “I had to wait to get those in place but I’m very glad I have them. They can tell me you don’t have three values that crossed any threshold, not when you apply the context of whether the test followed a period of altitude training or was carried out at altitude.

“Not when you apply whether the two-hour rule – that it cannot be used within two hours of hard competition or hard training – is not valid.

“That rules out two of the tests they are referring to, and the other is not above the threshold.”

Earlier, Radcliffe had claimed the pressure being put on her to release her blood test data was “bordering on abuse”.

Radcliffe, a vocal campaigner against drug cheats during her career, has admitted to fluctuations in her blood test scores, but said they were down to entirely innocent reasons and she had been cleared by the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA).

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