Rick Broadbent, Athletics Correspondent
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Does anyone really care about cleaning up athletics? That is the question that will fester away long after we know whether Dwain Chambers will be competing for Great Britain at the Olympic Games in Beijing next month.
“It comes down to dollars. The IOC does not want to face the truth because there is too much money riding on it. The Olympics are marketed as this elite competition and nobody wants to admit it's all false.” So said Victor Conte, the founder of the Balco laboratory, a tainted ex-con in many eyes but a man with a pretty good insight into beating the system.
Conte accused the IOC of dragging its heels because it did not want the extent of doping to be made public. He may have been making a melodrama out of a crisis, but that we are saddled with the IAAF's paltry two-year ban is one reason why the British Olympic Association (BOA) bylaw banning dopers for life is needed. Whether or not it falls tomorrow, even temporarily, the debate should move to whether there is a collective will to eradicate doping.
And what is doping? It has been casually dismissed as someone making a mistake, but doping is actually rigging results. If Sir Alex Ferguson, the Manchester United manager, bought off referees to win the Champions League, would we forget about it after two years? How would you feel if, after your emotional investment in Rafael Nadal's Wimbledon triumph, you found out that he had been getting a man-made fifth-set kick? Would you cheer his return two years later?
Chambers seems remorseful, but he lied, cheated, defrauded a sport and thus devalued it. He also denied his compatriots medals. Yet in the build-up to his win in the 100 metres at the Olympic trials on Saturday, I heard a PE teacher saying that Chambers should be going to Beijing. Discuss for your homework, kids.
Few seem to care. Craig Pickering, who finished third at the trials behind Chambers, is anything but outspoken. He must feel like the boy in The Emperor's New Clothes because he is the only athlete hoping to qualify for the Olympics who has said that a life ban is good. Next he will be saying that it is not nice to drown puppies. Yet such is the apathetic response to doping that Pickering is singled out for his views. Plenty of former pros have given Chambers a verbal kicking, but how many would have done so if they were still competing?
“We're guilty until proven innocent,” Pickering said of the effect that cheating has had on the 100 metres. So why is he a lone voice? There is no peer pressure bearing down on the dopers.
Even Ed Moses, the legendary former 400 metres hurdler and leading anti-drugs voice, said that the life ban is like a “death sentence”. Last year I broached the subject with Pierre Weiss, the IAAF general secretary, who suggested that murderers did not get that long.
I am not sure they understand why athletics stadiums are usually half-empty. Athletics has a probably incurable credibility problem. Pious voices damning Chambers for suggesting in a BBC interview that it was possible to win clean but “the person that's taken drugs has to be having a real bad day” are in denial. Chambers took drugs because he believed his rivals were at it. Given that three of the past five winners of the Olympic 100 metres final have at some stage tested positive, he would have been daft not to be cynical. He should be criticised for what he did, not what he said, but is there a collective will to cure the problems rather than crucify someone for acknowledging them?
Not really. It is to the sport's embarrassment that we are still waiting for four-year bans. It is to its shame that more research has not been done into the long-term effects of doping. Two years ago a study at Umea University in Sweden raised worrying questions. “The morphological changes induced by testosterone and anabolic steroids are very long-lasting, perhaps life-long,” it said. “It is very likely that these changes are beneficial for physical performance. The findings ... therefore raise questions regarding relevant suspension times for athletes caught with banned substances in the body.”
If someone in Sweden can do some meaningful research, why can't the World Anti-Doping Agency?
The BOA bylaw has been overturned on appeal no end of times, but it still sends out the message that doping should be abhorrent. It should be deeply offensive to all in sport. Chambers should not have felt that he needed to take drugs to have a level playing field. Get rid of the bylaw and all it will show is that the collective will is more offended by stiff penalties for cheating than by cheating itself.
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The questions posed in your 4th paragraph "how would you feel .." are particularly interesting: try a quick web surf on the Spanish Police 'Operation Puerto' doping investigation - it seems that a certain tennis player's name may feature amongst cyclists, footballers & athletes. Cheering, anyone?
Paul, Norwich,
The performance enhancing effects of anabolic drugs are, to a considerable extent, physiologically irreversible. As such, anyone that has doped in the past will still be benefitting from that decision in any future competition they may enter. Simply, Dwain can never again compete 'naturally'.
Nick Morrison, London, England
It would seem we consider murders, even multiple murders, to have 'served their time' and be redeemed but not a cheat - I know which I consider more serious crime. I wonder if he's not allowed to compete how the gold medal winner will feel being the fastest man in the world ... on a technicality??
Emma, Darlington,
With all knife crimes going on, it would be nice to see Dwain Chambers, show that you can make a wrong, right. we have all done something that may not have been right, but i bet none of us would want to be judged for the rest of our lives,
One word comes to mind "Forgiveness"
maurice, newport, wales
In any sport at the top level, it is to be expected that the athletes are the best of the best. Even mediocre athletes can win if they have enough drugs to help them. My opinion is that any athlete testing positive for drugs be permanently excluded from all competitions for life.
James, Wrexham,
Drugs in sport is clearly wrong and the fact that Chambers is even considered a possible Beijing athlete is shocking. It's a shame he's not made an example of to all other athletes, and this point be used to start more stringent drug testing.Then again, since when has any commitee been authoritive?
Ben, Isle of Man,
Never heard such alot of self righteous twaddle. The Olympics has been, is and will be "dirty" for years. What amounts to an overblown egg and spoon race takes up way too many column inches as it is. The sooner it's over the better.
james, Cambridge, England
Here come the hypocritical moral absolutists again. Societies world wide are riddled with drugs. These are marketed with aplomb by the establishment and multi nationals as panacea for all our ills. But we expect athletes to live in a vacuum & treat them like outcasts when they fall foul. Go figure!
Ollie, Kingston Upon Thames, UK
If he successfully challenges the legality of the ban then he should compete.He will be an example of an athlete who made a stupid mistake, held his hands up and competed correctly. By still competing he is a permanent reminder of how it should be done. A ban will not have the same effect
Andy, London, UK
If Chambers wishes to use the law to prevent restraint of trade, then the law should be used to provide suitable punishment.
Charge him with obtaining money by deception, drugs offences and get sponsors to insert clauses in the athletes contracts to require repayment and damages.
Ivan, Coventry, West Midlands
Can anyone assure us that any of the people running, jumping, throwing or indeed rowing etc are not doped to the eyeballs.?
Is the 2012 olympics here 2 weeks of drugs on display.?
No, did not think so.!!!!!
james, Brighton, uk
has nobody noticed that the BOA is the only international Athletics body taking this course of action....
Couple that with the backward step taken in reducing bans from 4 years (Ben Johnson era) to 2 years and you can see an uncomfortable understanding that restriction of trade is real
Simon, Cape Town,
I didn't mean to do it guv! well chambers did do it and if he had any true remorse or consideration for those he cheated including teamates of medals, he wouldn't even contemplate a return.
jonners, weybridge,