Andrew Tilin's article and soon-to-be published book are yet another sad demonstration of just how far journalists will go to make a buck.
We all know that performance enhancing drugs work. Why else would athletes take them.
But, what is really disturbing here is that, just to make a buck, Tilin decided to cheat his fellow competitors. We should be thankful that he wasn't very fast, even with the drugs. What if he had kept someone else from winning or off the podium because he was taking drugs?
When his book was published and he started to cash in, was he planning on sending some of his ill-gotten gains to his fellow competitors whom he cheated out of their moment of glory?
And as far as being busted by USADA, Tilin's performances both before and after he started taking drugs were so unremarkable that he had to call USADA (and several times at that) to convince them that he should be sanctioned for his deeds.
I guess you can't put the word "scandal" in the title of your book unless you get busted. So, after several phone calls to USADA to admit his deeds he got the "scandalous" aspect of his book.
As someone who announces many races in Northern California where Tilin raced during his "doped up" years, nobody was ever aware that he was doing something illegal. His race day performances didn't put him on anybody's radar.
As I said at the beginning, it is sad that Tilin decided to stoop to such a low level to make a buck. Journalists get a bad rap and here is a prime example why. A much better book would to have been to interview athletes who doped and try to understand their motivations for doing so.