- Mar 13, 2009
- 16,853
- 2
- 0
technically, he was Russian. So that is Oleg Tinkov and Vladimir Putin's fault, and not Australias yayslowspoke said:
technically, he was Russian. So that is Oleg Tinkov and Vladimir Putin's fault, and not Australias yayslowspoke said:
The Hitch said:From 1997, some people had wised up already by then it seems.
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1009868/index.htm
Clausfarre said:Thanks. That was a great article, a true evergreen.... It serves to understand the mentality of anyone dedicating their lives to winning which obviously clashes so very hard with the public's expectations of purity and fairness.
A scenario, from a 1995 poll of 198 sprinters, swimmers, powerlifters and other assorted athletes, most of them U.S. Olympians or aspiring Olympians: You are offered a banned performance-enhancing substance, with two guarantees: 1) You will not be caught. 2) You will win. Would you take the substance?
One hundred and ninety-five athletes said yes; three said no.
There have been similar polls in recent years with similar results.Dear Wiggo said:I am sure if they took the poll in 2006 or later, the numbers would be flipped, with only 3 / 198 saying yes and 195 saying no, they would not dope.
Or something.
...
The Hitch said:There have been similar polls in recent years with similar results.
One I remember asked the 2nd question from the article - would you take a magic pill that gave you all the wins you want but die in 5 years. 50% said yes.
Another one asked if they would take a pill or something and 90% said yes.
Though difference was the concept of the drug being banned (and therefore cheating) wasn't mentioned.
I've linked to them before, definitely in olympic threads if not others, but with 25 000 posts, its looking for a needle in a haystack. I also seen one or two others post them.
It was while doing vague google searches for the more recent polls that I stumbled across the 1997 article
Olympic gold medal winner and track and field coach Jon Drummond is suing top sprinter Tyson Gay and the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency, alleging that they falsely accused him of administering and providing performance-enhancing drugs to the star athlete.
The defamation lawsuit was filed Wednesday in Tarrant County civil court against Gay and Travis Tygart, the chief executive officer of the USADA.
Drummond, who coached Tyson from 2007 to 2012, said he was notified in mid-April that the USADA intended to seek a lifetime ban against him, preventing him from participating in any professional activities related to track and field, according to the lawsuit.
Drummond says, he used his position in the sport to speak out against using banned substances and also discussed the subject in his capacity as an ordained minister. He says no other athletes he has coached have tested positive for performance-enhancing drugs.
Drummond “was absolutely stunned when rumors began to arise that either Mr. Gay himself or others intended to blame this positive test on Mr. Drummond,” the lawsuit says.
Spider1964 said:Gee.. all this sounds familiar
http://www.star-telegram.com/2014/05/21/5838202/local-track-coach-sues-olympic.html?rh=1
hitch this is a cogent reply, very insightful, so my question is, why have you been on my a r s eThe Hitch said:Well put Clausfarre.
The first few sentences of the article should be engraved on the front door of any anti doping agency
Anti doping still operates under this myth that athletes are inherently good and only a few bad eggs would dope.
It shockingly underestimates the power of the will to win - hillariously used as an argument for cleanliness
Tim Montgomery said he wanted the world record so badly, he didn't care if he died the second he stepped of the track.
Of course there are honest athletes in sport, and of course anti doping can improve things, but some idea of the realities of doping is neccesary before that can happen and with most sports they still think doping is something only some sociopath would try.
Doping experts have long known that drug tests catch only a tiny fraction of the athletes who use banned substances because athletes are constantly finding new drugs and techniques to evade detection. So in 2011, the World Anti-Doping Agency convened a team of researchers to try to determine more accurately how many athletes use performance-enhancing drugs.
More than 2,000 track and field athletes participated in the study, and according to the findings, which were reviewed by The New York Times, an estimated 29 percent of the athletes at the 2011 world championships and 45 percent of the athletes at the 2011 Pan-Arab Games said in anonymous surveys that they had doped in the past year.
By contrast, less than 2 percent of drug tests examined by WADA laboratories in 2010 were positive.
John Hoberman, a University of Texas professor who is an expert on performance-enhancing drugs, said the study’s findings dispelled the notion that doping was a deviant behavior among a few athletes.
“Either the sport is recruiting huge numbers of deviants,” he said, “or this is simply routine behavior being engaged in by, more or less, normal people.”
He added, “That’s dangerous for WADA, because that’s a character issue.”
SecomBe said:Nice to hear a swimmer talking about how much more needs to be done. I thought them all guilty by association.
http://www.supersport.com/aquatics/blogs/roland-schoeman/Drowning_out_drug_cheats
Wow. That is very important.neineinei said:This is old, but it deserves to be dragged up again.
Since then WADA and IAAF has done their best to surpress the resarch.
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/08/23/sports/research-finds-wide-doping-study-withheld.html
The Hitch said:Anti doping still operates under this myth that athletes are inherently good and only a few bad eggs would dope.
The Hitch said:Wow. That is very important.
ok, so last weeks Australian Story program on Perkins, he said he had not taken Stillnox(a benzodiazepam which has been used/abused for sleeping)blackcat said:definitely taking gear, but who is not at Olympic Final level. Talented, not exactly a Michelle Smith level, not a fraud, but definitely on gear.
Zero chance he talks about roids and epo tho
Franklin said:Innocent till proven guilty. I'd be truly hoorified if we abandoned that one.
So what to do? Serious question... what do you want to do which is both affordable and fits with our society?
right, we aint depriving anyone liberty.More Strides than Rides said:Sport isn't a court if law. But still, whats wrong with "suspicious until proven __________"?. Why do we have to start with presumed innocence given the historic doping culture of the sport with no indication of change in attitudes, enforcement, personnel or the sport's structure?
More Strides than Rides said:Sport isn't a court if law. But still, whats wrong with "suspicious until proven __________"?. Why do we have to start with presumed innocence given the historic doping culture of the sport with no indication of change in attitudes, enforcement, personnel or the sport's structure?