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Prospective host cities have increasingly been giving the Games a hard pass. What if athletes starting doing the same?
Prospective host cities have increasingly been giving the Games a hard pass. What if athletes starting doing the same? (Photo: Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images)
In Stride

It鈥檚 Time to Stop Romanticizing the Olympics

2019 has already been an eventful year in doping news. If the Olympics don鈥檛 care about clean athletes, why should we care about the Olympics?

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Prospective host cities have increasingly been giving the Games a hard pass. What if athletes starting doing the same?
(Photo: Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images)

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As if the ongoing impasse over the federal budget weren鈥檛 depressing enough, the world of endurance sports kicked off 2019 with a self-inflicted crisis of its own. Once again, the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) for allowing itself to be played by Russia鈥攖he country behind the great urine switcheroo of 2014. WADA certainly shouldn鈥檛 be immune to criticism, but it鈥檚 worth remembering that the agency has far less influence than the athletic institutions that it is meant to serve. First and foremost, we should be holding the International Olympic Committee (IOC) accountable.聽

Before we get to that, here鈥檚 an update on what has so far been an eventful year in doping news.

In September, WADA made the controversial decision to reinstate Russia鈥檚 national drug-testing body, which had been suspended since 2015 in the wake of revelations about the country鈥檚 . Russia鈥檚 reinstatement, which was heavily criticized at the time by USADA President Travis Tygart and others, came with the stipulation that WADA be granted access to a laboratory in Moscow so that the agency could obtain further evidence for pending investigations. WADA鈥檚 hard deadline for obtaining data from the Moscow lab was set for December 31, 2018. I鈥檒l spare you the suspense. , the team they sent to Moscow was rebuffed because their equipment apparently wasn鈥檛 certified under Russian law. The deadline came and went, eliciting widespread ridicule of WADA President Craig Reedie. 聽聽

鈥淚 can鈥檛 believe that former 1960s badminton starlet Craig Reedie has had his arse handed to him yet again by former KGB colonel Vladimir Putin,鈥 Guardian columnist Marina Hyde last week.聽

In response, WADA鈥檚 founding president Richard Pound published an in which he claimed that the 鈥渓ynch mobs鈥 attacking the agency were doing more harm than good.聽

鈥淓fforts to discredit and destroy WADA will not help the fight against doping in sport and the protection of clean athletes, despite the athlete-centered rhetoric,鈥 Pound wrote, adding that, at the end of the day, we鈥檇 be far worse off if WADA ceased to exist.聽

As for the snafu of the mysteriously inaccessible Moscow laboratory, on Monday WADA that the issue had been 鈥渞esolved鈥 and that another team would be headed to the Russian capital later this week. Assuming that things work out this time, the fact that the initial deadline was missed by a few days shouldn鈥檛 be all too consequential in and of itself. Of course, given all that鈥檚 transpired, one doesn鈥檛 need to be a hardened cynic to be skeptical about any data WADA does manage to obtain.聽

But what, really, is the alternative for WADA in the case? Even if the agency were to declare Russia noncompliant and re-suspend the country, that wouldn鈥檛 guarantee any action from the organizations who actually call the shots. It shouldn鈥檛 be WADA鈥檚 main duty to mete out punishment, especially if more powerful governing bodies don鈥檛 follow up.

Which brings us to the IOC.聽

On January 1, IOC President Thomas Bach published a 鈥.鈥 After modestly taking credit for the burgeoning peace between North and South Korea, he proceeded to tout the IOC鈥檚 tough sanctioning of Russia at last year鈥檚 Winter Olympics and declared that Russia had atoned for its doping sins. As a reminder, despite officially suspending the Russian Federation (a suspension that has since been lifted), the IOC nevertheless allowed 160 Russian athletes to compete in Pyeongchang, , among others.

Unsurprisingly, Bach鈥檚 announcement didn鈥檛 sit well with everyone, not least because it came out the day after Russia missed WADA鈥檚 鈥渉ard deadline.鈥澛

鈥淏ach is sending a clear message that he will back Russia no matter what, no matter the rule violations, compliance be damned,鈥 USADA General Counsel Bill Bock on January 1.聽

鈥淚f he were in the U.S., Mueller would be investigating. A more definitive statement of utter capitulation and feckless weakness cannot be imagined,鈥 he added.

To be sure, Bock has also been an , arguing that the organization has been far too lenient in the face of Russian non-cooperation. (It鈥檚 worth mentioning that, as a second requirement for reinstatement, that Russia 鈥減ublicly accept鈥 that state-sponsored doping did take place. Shockingly, this has not happened.)

However, in the age of micro-dosing and聽, we need some iteration of WADA to exist. If we鈥檙e going to have anti-doping rules there has to be some means of enforcing them on an international scale. On the other hand, when it comes down to it, we don鈥檛 strictly need the Olympics in order to have elite-level international athletic competition.聽

When it comes down to it, we don鈥檛 strictly need the Olympics in order to have elite-level international athletic competition.

I know what you鈥檙e thinking. As someone who spends a lot of time writing about professional distance running, I鈥檓 as aware as anyone that the Olympics are the only time non-enthusiasts tend to notice the sport. If you鈥檙e a pro runner鈥攐r, for that matter, a pro skier, or swimmer, or curler!鈥攖here鈥檚 no bigger stage. What鈥檚 more, if you鈥檙e an elite athlete in an 鈥淥lympic sport,鈥 chances are that the significance of the Games is so embedded in your psyche that you can鈥檛 imagine competing without the five-ring dream beckoning in the distance; witness the and the many more who say that making an Olympic team would be the greatest triumph of their career.

And I totally get it. I鈥檓 in no danger of becoming an Olympian and yet ever since childhood, I鈥檝e been indoctrinated by the pageantry of it all: the torch relays, the theme songs, the medal presentations, Citius, Altius, Fortius, Bob Costas鈥檚 immutable face…聽

But we shouldn鈥檛 let our sentimental ideas about what has evolved into a multi-billion dollar marketing operation lead us to believe that the Olympics must, as a rule, always represent the pinnacle of athletic achievement. If the Olympics don鈥檛 give a shit about clean athletes, perhaps clean athletes should return the favor.聽

鈥淲hen we will hit that critical mass where more athletes look at the Olympics with disdain than with esteem is an open question,鈥 Jules Boykoff, noted Olympics critic and author of ,听put it to me in an email. 鈥淏ut there鈥檚 no question that these days, for clean athletes, serious grievances churn beneath the shimmery surface of the Games.鈥澛

Of course, turning such grievances into meaningful action is a tall order. For most, the Games are still an opportunity that is too seductive (and lucrative) to pass up. For now, the only ones who we might expect to protest are those who can afford to do so.聽

鈥淚 think if some big-name athletes took a stand against the IOC and said they鈥檇 withhold participation unless things improved, that could make a dent,鈥 Boykoff wrote in his email.聽

鈥淢ore than likely, that would come from an Olympian coming toward the end of their career, or one who has solidified so many sponsorship deals outside the Olympics that they would be insulated from the decision not to participate, let alone any threats the IOC might try to level.鈥

Prospective host cities have increasingly been giving the Games a hard pass. What if athletes starting doing the same?

Lead Photo: Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images

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