There was another very sobering afternoon’s select committee testimony on Wednesday for those who would like to believe in the sanctity of sport. The backsliding about how to deal with it went on to the bitter end.

Why not give the very substantial annual budget which UK Sport receives a 4 per cent “haircut,” it was suggested as proceedings drew on, and redistribute the money raised to UK Anti-Doping (UKAD) - the organisation which is fighting a godforsaken battle against drugs in sport.

When this notion surfaced, the chief executive of UK Sport, Liz Nicholls, had only just finished telling MPs that she felt the level of funding for UKAD was inadequate - but evidently not so inadequate that her organisation should help pay for it.

“All I would say…” offered Nicholls, all insouciant and matter-of fact after the haircut had been suggested, “…is that 80 per cent of our funding goes out of the door to athletes. It would be £16m less [for us] so we would have to reduce sport and athletes’ funding.”

It was yet another affirmation of sport’s headlong pursuit of success at all cost. Nicholls’ organisation has set down on a path of ruthless funding elitism, in which winning sports take all and the rest are brushed aside, in blind pursuit of Olympic glory and an orgy of nationalistic self-congratulation every four years. It cannot even see that most people would welcome the participants receiving a few million less if it meant that our elite sport was monitored by a rigorous, independent, adequately funded testing organisation.

It is ridiculous to assume that sports will police themselves: the select committee’s extraordinary doping inquiry has been testament to that, as the dog-ate-my-homework excuses for lost medical records continue to grow.

The cyclists’ Doc, Richard Freeman, lost Bradley Wiggins’ details because he couldn’t get to grips with Dropbox technology and then had the misfortune to take the laptop detailing them on holiday to Cyprus and find it stolen. The athletes’ Doc, it now emerges, just didn’t have time to record that he had given a controversial substance L-Carnitine, to Mo Farah, to help the runner’s performance before the 2014 London Marathon. Robin Chakraverty was under-staffed, short of time, had a flight to prepare for and burdened with athletes. The UK Athletics chief executive Ed Warner told the select committee chairman Damian Collins not to “tar us with the same brush“ as the cyclists. And why not, exactly?

There was the usual profusion of lame excuses, empty apologies and general blah, blah, blah on Wednesday. Chakraverty’s failure had been “inexcusable,” said Warner. Chakraverty said he had committed a “lapse.” Meanwhile, those who deserve assurances that their beloved sports are doing everything to be clean look on aghast.