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Doping jeopardizes future of int'l sport

6 Comments

All of the stakeholders in sport are fully aware of the high prevalence of doping and the dangers it presents, both to the health of athletes and to the integrity of competitions. Many of these stakeholders have a plan to deal with it. Unfortunately, their plan is to ignore the problem, pretend it does not exist, pretend to attack it vigorously, and ultimately hope that the public will get tired of hearing about it. They will then declare the sport to have been cured of the scourge, and the public will either accept the vanilla or become indifferent to the problem.

Doping is not, as apologists like to suggest, merely a way of leveling the playing field. Athletes do not dope to become as good as other athletes – they do it to beat them (even if it requires quantities of substances that may be harmful, or even lethal). In many cases, coaches, trainers, doctors, and scientists encourage and assist athletes in doping, even though they know they are corrupting them and the sports they participate in. The enablers are, in many respects, far more culpable than the athletes upon whom they experiment.

Anti-doping rules are not arbitrary. They are based on an overwhelming consensus among sport administrators, athletes, and medical and scientific personnel who are concerned with the health of athletes and the integrity of sport. The most recent version of these rules (contained in the World Anti-Doping Code) was adopted at the World Conference on Doping in Sport in November 2013.

The rules are clear and the measures they contain can be effectively applied, but they will only work if the people and organizations affected by them are committed to the fight against doping in sport.

Education, prevention, detection and deterrence are key. Those involved must know the risks and consequences of doping, both at a personal and institutional level. They must be educated about the health of athletes, the essential morality of adhering to the agreed-upon rules of sport, and the risk that corruption of the essential elements of sport may eventually lead to its collapse.

It is far easier to prevent a problem than to solve one. Prevention of doping is preferable to permitting it to infect sport and then trying to cure that infection. Prevention requires energy and commitment and is difficult to measure – not unlike security measures, where success is measured by lack of incidents. Education is an important component of prevention, as is the existence of measures that may expose transgressions.

Human nature being what it is, there will always be some who care nothing about the rules of competition to which they promised to adhere. Such people will not be deterred from cheating by ethical appeals. They may, however, be deterred by the fear of getting caught.

The scientific basis of detection has become quite sophisticated (as has the science applied to active cheating). Almost all forms of doping can be scientifically identified through testing of urine and blood.

Deterrence is assisted by the imposition of sanctions. Athletes and officials who cheat should be removed from the sport they have corrupted. An escalating regime of sanctions has been adopted to protect clean athletes, and to provide a fair opportunity for anyone charged with a violation of the rules to put forward an informed defense.

This system will work if stakeholders want it to work, but it can also be sabotaged by those who prefer to ignore the problems of doping in sport or those who persist in the corruption of sport.

The stakes are enormous. If organized sport is unable to refind its moral compass, its future is in considerable jeopardy. Organized sport depends on support from the private sector. If the private sector loses interest in a corrupt system, it will withdraw its support, and the result will be the disappearance of international sport as we know it.

© Japan Today

©2024 GPlusMedia Inc.

6 Comments
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The problem is going to get MUCH worse once super-customized PED's based on the athlete's own stem cells are made. Those are just essentially undetectable (because you can't tell the difference between elevated testosterone levels caused naturally from athletic activity and the use of these highly-customized PED's for starters) and at that point, the drug testers will only be looking for old-style PED's--which the best athletes would have abandoned using because they could afford these undetectable PED's.

3 ( +3 / -0 )

Simply make using performance-enhancing drugs a crime, with a 5 year prison sentence, and enforce it strictly. The paltry 2 year bans meted out to most offenders now isn't much of a deterrent.

0 ( +1 / -1 )

All of know that doping undermines the value of sports but realistically can they reduce or eventually eliminate it? The only way to combat this is to test the athlete with no advance notice and have specimens obtained in sample collection that can be transported in a timely manner to laboratories for analysis. Of course they will have to monitor this and hopefully get the cooperation all athletes to follow the rules.

-1 ( +0 / -1 )

Wait for the pharmacological Olympics; featuring the double-blind clinical sprint, the cross-over trial hurdles, the 400 metre injectable relay and throwing the placebo! New logo of 4 round red circles, symbolising the major blood groups!

3 ( +3 / -0 )

The experts claim that dopers will always be 5 years ahead.

They're all on the gear. All of them!

1 ( +1 / -0 )

I have long since given up giving a %$#@ about Olympics & the various "amateur " sports, they are all dirty as far as drugs etc are concerned & have been for decades now, OLD NEWS!

Ditto for the pros, too many on roids, I have long ago stopped respecting "athletes" on their achievements or cheering for any teams.

To the few clean athletes & Olympians etc you have my sympathies, enjoy what you do & then get on with something else after a few years

0 ( +0 / -0 )

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