"For example, if Jackie was going to be tested in the long jump, and she was in the top eight, the top eight athletes should be tested on the same day."
Kersee, who is preparing Olympic 200 metres gold medallist Allyson Felix for the 400 at the Aug. 22-30 IAAF world championships in Beijing, also said there should not be a wide variation globally in the number of times an athlete is tested.
"I have had athletes such as Jackie, such as Allyson, to name a few, that were tested and tested and tested and I have worked with a couple of foreign athletes," he said.
"In the same period of time, we (his U.S. athletes) were tested three times and they (the foreign athletes) haven't been tested yet.
"If you are asking me is the testing protocol fair? I don't believe it is, not internationally. Why that is, I don't know. It might just be the roll of the dice, but I don't know."
Kersee said he would welcome anti-doping officials testing his athletes at any time.
"As you well know, I have been through allegations (in past years) of being a doping coach but... (it's) 40 years later (and) everybody has passed the tests and has represented the United States and other countries."
As long as global officials are doing their job, clean athletes everywhere have nothing to worry about, he added.
"Our sport should say, 'If you are cheating, then we are going to try to catch you'," Kersee said, "and those athletes will pay the consequences."
(Reporting by Gene Cherry in Raleigh, North Carolina)
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