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Doping Triathlon James Cunnama outsideonline.com Clean Protocol
James Cunnuma won the Ironman 70.3 South Africa triathlon in January 2014. (Photo: Craig Muller/IRONMAN South Afric)

To Eliminate Dopers: Is a Lie Detector Test the Answer?

Convince the computer you're clean and you get the Clean Protocol program's seal of approval. Any takers?

Published: 
Doping Triathlon James Cunnama outsideonline.com Clean Protocol
(Photo: Craig Muller/IRONMAN South Afric)

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When placed second in the 2009 Ironman Austria, he heard the whispers. In an era wracked by doping scandals, people raised their eyebrows at his meteoric rise from obscurity. To some, the performance just seemed too good to be true.

The Aussie pro could do little more than insist he was clean, credit a grueling training regimen, and take the usual doping tests. The problem is, that鈥檚 what Lance Armstrong did for years before his Oprah confession. And look what that proved.

Now, on the eve of the world鈥檚 premier triathlon, Saturday鈥檚 Ironman World Championships in Kona, Hawaii, Cunnama is taking part in the Clean Protocol, a new effort to certify pro athletes as clean. If successful, the program will reassure wary fans, sponsors, and fellow athletes that they can really believe in extraordinary performances. For athletes under the microscope, it promises a way to answer the maddening challenge to prove a negative鈥攖hat they haven鈥檛 doped.

[quote]It begs the question: Is this a quixotic misadventure or an ingenious example of thinking outside the box?[/quote]

The program has already won support from a handful of prominent triathletes at Kona, including Cunnama and his girlfriend, . All told, seven athletes鈥擟unnama, Swallow, TJ Tollakson, Andrew Starykowicz, Luke McKenzie, Harry Wiltshire, and Daniel Halksworth鈥攈ave been certified as of Friday morning. More聽could join聽the list after another day of聽screening. And Alex Bok announced he will require the athletes on his , a combination of pros and elite amateurs, to take part.

“This is a method perhaps of proving that I’m clean,鈥 said the 31-year-old, who finished fourth at Kona last year, and is a favorite for a top place again.聽鈥淚 don鈥檛 know if it鈥檚 the solution to doping and anti-doping. But it鈥檚 worth a try.鈥

But the fledgling program faces major challenges at its unveiling. Ironman organizers and the World Anti-Doping Agency have both distanced themselves from it. There are questions about the science underlying the tests. Anti-doping agencies wield armies of testers, advanced laboratories, and low rates of false positives. Clean Protocol is really a handful of passionate people on a mission. It begs the question: Is this a quixotic crusade or an ingenious example of thinking outside the box?

Instead of unmasking the bad guys, Clean Protocol will publicize the clean ones. Think of it like the environmental certifications on everything from lumber to coffee. To be certificed as clean, athletes and their entourage undergo psychological tests meant to reveal signs they might be prone to doping. They promise to make the results of their usual blood tests available for examination. Then they take a new type of lie detector test to see if they are telling the truth. If the athlete passes, she gets certified as clean. If she doesn’t, she isn’t branded a doper. Instead, the results stay confidential.

The strategy gets around some of the flaws in the current system, says 40-year-old Teague Czislowski, founder of the World Clean Sports Organization, which is promoting the protocol. Conventional anti-doping measures struggle to keep pace with ever-newer drugs and tricks. But a lie detector can catch doping long after drugs have left the body, said Czislowski. And because he isn鈥檛 accusing people of doping, the test doesn鈥檛 have to be as airtight as the drug tests, he said. Rather than replace standard anti-doping tests, he sees the Clean Protocol as a compliment to them鈥攁 way to plug the gaps in the current system.

Doping Triathlon James Cunnama outsideonline.com Clean Protocol
James Cunnama and his girlfriend, Jodie Swallow (left), have both thrown in their support for Clean Protocol. (Craig Muller/IRONMAN South Africa)

So, is it too good to believe? The certification hinges on the reliability of the lie detector. Tests so far show the device is 85 percent accurate, said Russ Warner, vice president of marketing for Utah-based , the company selling the technology. But that means 8.5 percent of those who pass the test should not have, and, more troublingly, 6.5 percent were honest people classified as lying. In comparison, , though some dispute those figures.

The product, based on , works on the theory that lying takes more mental work than telling the truth. The strain triggers distinctive eye movements. Athletes sit in front of a computer equipped with a small infrared camera aimed at their eyes, and spend about half an hour reading and answering questions on the screen. A computer program analyzes the results and spits out a final score from 0 (don鈥檛 trust as far as you can throw) to 100 (George Washington reincarnated).

Converus, which launched earlier this year, is banking on their lie detector鈥檚 convenience as they market it for mass-screening of job applicants or government workers in sensitive fields like law enforcement. Checking for doped triathletes is merely a novelty.

But the technology is relatively untested outside the lab, cautioned professor聽, a psychologist at Boise State University in Boise, Idaho. Honts studied under one of the leading researchers involved in Converus, and has traveled the world training law enforcement on how to use lie detectors.

[quote]A lie detector can catch doping long after drugs have left the body, said Czislowski. And because he isn鈥檛 accusing people of doping, the test doesn鈥檛 have to be as airtight as the drug tests.[/quote]

Converus has yet to be certified in the United States for screening government employees. To get that seal of approval, it鈥檚 starting a field test in Colorado examining 500 people on parole for drug crimes.

鈥淚 haven鈥檛 seen any data that it doesn’t work. But I haven’t seen any data that it does outside a laboratory setting,鈥 Honts said. 鈥淭hese are not easy problems to solve. If they were, we would have lie detectors everywhere.鈥

Meanwhile, in the sporting arena, the Clean Protocol raises some tricky questions. What about the not-so-small pool of athletes who falsely test positive? Regular doping tests are designed to be almost failsafe, to avoid falsely accusing someone who鈥檚 innocent. The false positive rate for the lie detector鈥6.5 percent鈥攚ould be unacceptable in a test for, say, steroids.

While Clean Protocol is a voluntary program, what happens as teams鈥攍ike TBB鈥攕tart requiring it? And what about athletes who opt out? If the program becomes more popular, will there be an implicit suggestion that they鈥檙e doping?

Dr. Michael Puchowicz, an Arizona sports medicine doctor and the chief-of-science for the World Clean Sports Organization, says Clean Protocol is so small today that concerns about a negative impact on athletes who don鈥檛 volunteer is hypothetical. But it may not stay that way for long.

Puchowicz has spent years examining the doping problem at his blog, (He has also written for 国产吃瓜黑料). An amateur cyclist and the doctor for Arizona State鈥檚 running teams, he was leery of the lie detector鈥檚 imperfections at first. But he鈥檚 become convinced it鈥檚 the best way to help address some of the shortcomings of traditional anti-doping efforts.

鈥淚 wish I could give you that 鈥楬ey, this is going to solve the world鈥 answer. But that鈥檚 not reality. It鈥檚 trying to work with what鈥檚 out there and see if we can make a difference,鈥 he said.

Doping Triathlon James Cunnama outsideonline.com Clean Protocol
Cunnuma was not well-known when he nearly won the Ironman Austria triathlon in 2009, raising eyebrows. (Chris Hitchcock/IRONMAN South Africa)

There鈥檚 some precedent for using a lie detector for sports doping鈥擥erman cycling ace Marcel Kittel at the request of German sports magazine Sport Bild. But so far, leaders in the anti-doping world have given Clean Protocol and the organization behind it a cool response.

After Czislowski sent Kona-bound pros an invitation to get certified, a top Ironman official distanced the race from his group. 鈥淲e cannot vouch for WCSO’s methodology or its credibility as an organization. WCSO’s claims around the effectiveness of the “Clean Protocol” are to the best of our knowledge unsubstantiated,鈥 Ironman鈥檚 head of anti-doping, Kate Mittelstadt, wrote in a letter to the pros.

The World Anti-Doping Agency echoed that, saying they welcomed clean sport initiatives from officially sanctioned groups. But 鈥渋t is not a program that is aligned with the World Anti-Doping Code and we understand it is not sanctioned by IRONMAN,鈥 wrote WADA spokesman Ben Nichols in an e-mail.

Czislowski says he鈥檚 not surprised, given that his project is so new and he鈥檚 a relative unknown in the anti-doping world. He said he was inspired to jump into the fray by the parade of doping scandals in recent years, and the laments of professional athletes that they were all tarnished. He casts the effort as entirely altruistic, one he has funded. He鈥檚 starting at Kona because several pro triathletes asked him to do it, he said. So far, 10 athletes there have applied for certification. 鈥淚鈥檝e got no interest in making a single dollar out of this,鈥 he said.

Off the record, some pros have expressed reluctance at being guinea pigs in an unproven experiment, Cunnama said. But he sees little downside. He passed the test. But even if he hadn鈥檛 there would have been no consequences from race officials.

鈥淪o what have we got to lose?鈥 he said. 鈥淔or the moment, the WADA system just isn鈥檛 catching enough dopers.鈥

Lead Photo: Craig Muller/IRONMAN South Afric

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