Home > Drugs in sport - a bitter pill to swallow
by Robin Parisotto on 08 December 2006
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Doping! Honestly who gives a bu**er these days? You hardly see people protesting in the streets about it. With so many other issues dominating our lives doping is fast becoming a ‘non-event’. Sport has been engaged in a losing battle to bring the true ‘Olympic’ meaning to organised human performance ever since the Ancient games. Even with the resurrection of the Games in 1896 doping was still not officially recognised until 1938 when at the International Olympic Committee’s summit in Cairo the term 'doping' was entered into the ‘rule book’. This was despite doping being a problem since the very beginnings of sport and the fact that there was no way of detecting drugs in any case. It was not until the 1968 Mexico games that testing was introduced. The whole anti-doping thing was way behind the cheats from the very start. Has anything changed? But the ‘horse had bolted’ well and truly by 1968. Stimulants had been used since the 1880s - steroids discovered in the 1930s came into use during the 1950s, and blood doping reared in the early 1970s but testing only began for blood boosters at the Sydney 2000 Games. And growth hormones, said to be used by every man and his dog since the early 1980s, is still not detected with any accuracy or confidence. While doping has been recognised for some time efforts to make real progress against the scourge of drugs have been abysmal by any standards. The cheats have been able to outgun every move the testers have made although just lately the testers have been taking some of the ground back (eg. EPO and THG designer steroid tests). For all the rhetoric and vast amounts of cash invested in testing, catches have been remarkably few and the most famous bust was that of Ben Johnson during the 1988 Seoul games. But he was not the only one on the juice in that famous 100m sprint as six of the runners in the same race tested positive for one drug or another some time after. Its not ridiculous to think that they were on something at that time as well. The standout failure in capturing cheats though is no contest when you consider that during East Germany’s reign of Olympic supremacy during the 1972 – 1988 Olympic era, not one East German athlete tested positive for any drug during those games. This was despite the ‘institutional and systematic’ doping of all of its athletes. A shocking indictment on the anti-doping system any way you look at it. But there was more to this than meets the eye and won’t be discussed further suffice to say that politics played a major role.
Has the battle on drugs in sport been lost forever? Have your say by commenting below.
Comments (5)
by Craig Hackney on December 11, 2006
Nice article, but if the future is as bleak as you point out in this and your other articles, why not regulate and control insead of banning. Bring the system out of the closet, get it away from the underworld. The problem at the moment is not only is catching the cheats a problem, the sentences are too lenient when they do get caught. Zero tolerance is needed, get caught once and your career is over, the record books are cleansed of any mention of the cheats name. Make it clear that if they cheat and get caught, they will lose everything. Maybe then they'll take some notice.
by Rob on December 11, 2006
It all seems futile I know but really do we want to tell our kids no to recreational drugs but yes to sports drugs (although they are one of the same these days). Thats the only thing that keeps me from throwing the towel in. I am hopeful that one day human enhancement will be 'legal'ly and morally acceptable and will be done without drugs. Until then I could not condone kids using illicit or performance enhancing drugs in whatever context. I agree that one possible way out is to implement zero tolernace. Obviously the punishments handed out now are just not a great enough deterrence.
Had't even considered the recreational drugs issue. Good point, well made. As a parent it is one of many issuesthat scares the crap out of me.
by lornaflower on June 15, 2007
just wanted to thank you, just doing my alevel pe, got an exam tmrw, n wanted to just say how much u have helped me :) thanks x
by a student on September 15, 2007
like da previous comment,i am preparng for anassignment and u av helped me a hell of a lot, because i had no idea were i was gonna with it but now i think i do... thanks a lot :D
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