StCapps wrote:
Sure it helps a little to be on during a competition,
/thread
StCapps wrote:
Sure it helps a little to be on during a competition,
No him being a heat bag that was asking to get caught lead to a political backlash that is making sports worse. He did the world of athletics a massive disservice, he riled up the rubes and now their idiotic opinions infest the sporting landscape. I blame the media, politicians, and idiots like you, if y'all could be reasonable and didn't overreact sports would be in a much better place today.Montegriffo wrote:The difference between winning the 100m and coming 2nd or 3rd is often measured in 1000ths of a second so any advantage gained by using steroids is in a real sense a game changer.
Whether you accept this or not does not change the fact.
At the end of the day Ben Johnson has done the world of athletics a huge service. After the scandle of his win and susequent disqualification the testing of athletes has reached such a level that most no longer risk using them. The example of the exclusion of Russia from Rio for its state sponsored cheating is also a positive step. Many other sports need to follow the lead set by the Olympics and clean their acts up.
You are behind the times, biological passports will address this and could be the ultimate nemesis of doping.StCapps wrote: Way abnormally high testosterone levels per that athlete's base line readings, that can still be illegal, but the current standards are too stringent and don't adequately allow for people who have naturally higher testosterone levels and these can result in far too many false positives as well. Some people look action figures and never juiced in their lives, other people are too fat and worried about their body image and juice themselves to the gills, that's a thing, don't always judge a book by it's cover. We shouldn't go around banning naturally athletic folks for having naturally high testosterone levels, that's dumb. The athletic governing bodies are too worried about catching "cheaters" for good PR then they are about actually having PED regulation that makes a lick of sense.
From the Incas chewing coca leaves to ancient Olympians chomping opium, humans have used drugs to enhance performance for millennia. It wasn’t until 1928 that the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) decided to ban doping in sports—a profession where “fairness” matters above most other factors.
But a ban only works if the anti-doping agency can detect performance-enhancing drugs. So, instead of ending doping, all the IAAF managed to do is create a never-ending race: The agency creates a reliable test for a certain performance-enhancing drug. Athletes, in turn, look for new drugs that the agency cannot detect. The agency develops new drug tests. And on it goes.
After decades of cat-and-mouse, athletes found what they must have believed to be the ultimate doping agent: their own blood.
To enhance athletic performance with your own blood, you draw blood and store it in a freezer. Your body compensates by creating more blood. Then, months later, just before a competition, you can re-inject the old blood for a boost. As the red blood cell count goes up, so does an athlete’s ability to absorb oxygen. The more oxygen you grab with each breath, the more energy your body is able to burn and the better you are able to perform.
Although the enhancement is small compared to actual drugs, it can be the difference between a gold medal and a silver medal. Best of all, “extra blood” was never something WADA tested for.
But the anti-doping agency wasn’t going to sit by and be fooled. What it came up with in response might be a solution to stop doping once and for all: an athlete biological passport. The idea is to record some biological traits of an athlete through testing done at regular intervals. The biological passport’s partial implementation—recording blood and steroid levels—began in January 2014.
When all necessary biological traits are finally incorporated, WADA will no longer need to worry about finding new methods to detect a drug. It will only have to detect resulting changes in the body. In the case of blood doping, if the athlete’s normal red-blood-cell count is, say, 47%, but then is found to be 51% after a competition, foul play may have been involved.
WADA is confident that the biological passport could even deter genetic changes—the ultimate, ever-lasting enhancement—which are surely coming next. If an athlete inserts a performance-enhancing gene, it will probably leave detectable changes in the body, that would differ from the athlete’s profile in the biological passport.
Plus, if implemented right, the biological passport might even cut out another source of cheating in high level sporting events: corrupt officials. National anti-doping agencies destroying test samples to hide evidence of doping, as has been alleged in the latest case against Russian authorities, would be a less likely scenario.
Round and round we go.GrumpyCatFace wrote:The entire point of sports is to pit humans against each other on a level playing field. If you allow this to become a chemical arms race, then you've lost control of the field. Best chemist wins, rather than individual effort.
1, they can cause health problems.California wrote:Round and round we go.GrumpyCatFace wrote:The entire point of sports is to pit humans against each other on a level playing field. If you allow this to become a chemical arms race, then you've lost control of the field. Best chemist wins, rather than individual effort.
What's the difference between chemicals and different diets or training regimens?
These are overstated. A lot PEDs actually fix more health problems than they cause or exacerbate with proper use.Montegriffo wrote:1, they can cause health problems.
That's because of idiotic humans, making idiotic decisions, based on idiotic reasoning.Montegriffo wrote:2, they are against the rules
3, fans stop watching
4, sponsors stop investing
1. So can training, so can dietMontegriffo wrote:1, they can cause health problems.California wrote:Round and round we go.GrumpyCatFace wrote:The entire point of sports is to pit humans against each other on a level playing field. If you allow this to become a chemical arms race, then you've lost control of the field. Best chemist wins, rather than individual effort.
What's the difference between chemicals and different diets or training regimens?
2, they are against the rules
3, fans stop watching
4, sponsors stop investing