News (Media Awareness Project) - New Zealand: Column: Phelps Drugs Signal Wrong |
Title: | New Zealand: Column: Phelps Drugs Signal Wrong |
Published On: | 2009-02-08 |
Source: | New Zealand Herald (New Zealand) |
Fetched On: | 2009-02-12 20:28:57 |
PHELPS DRUGS SIGNAL WRONG
Michael Phelps will escape unpunished and unscathed from his latest
misdemeanour with recreational drugs. Even the International Olympic
Committee, that supposed paragon of the anti-drug crusaders, has
accepted his apology and says he's ready to resume as a role model,
whatever one of those is.
The liberal press in US and Britain, like the Washington Post and the
Guardian, dismissed his dope-smoking as just a youthful prank,
something completely normal for a 23-year-old, especially one who's
on an extended break from training following unprecedented success at
the Olympic Games.
No action will be taken against him by world swimming body FINA. The
World Anti Doping Agency doesn't impose bans for cannabis consumed
out of competition - not that Phelps was tested anyway - and as yet
no sponsors have cancelled the contract they have with him.
So this means it's okay for the most prolific Olympic champion of all
time to smoke dope. Is that good for the Olympics? Good for sport?
Good for humanity?
Despite Phelps' statement of apology, don't we see a pattern here?
After the Athens games in 2004, he was prosecuted for drunk driving.
He was apologising back then too... never again, a bad mistake, and so it goes.
Being Michael Phelps is not easy. He has attention
deficit/hyperactivity disorder, ADHD, which means he will focus
intently on one activity for long periods of time but be easily
distracted when there is no particular ambition to achieve.
Thus, when he'd completed that quite phenomenal gold medal haul in
Beijing, the next few months were time out.
Just as he can train and compete at levels never before reached in
freestyle and butterfly, he often reaches Olympic standards in
partying too. Everybody's entitled to a good time, although any sort
of regular cannabis smoking can only be harmful for the lungs, let
alone the brain. I would have thought any half-intelligent athlete
might think of those consequences.
And when you're one of the world's more recognisable sporting faces,
and the world is awash with mobile photographic and transmitting
devices, you just have to be clever about what you do, and where you do it.
He was probably lucky that London's News of the World ran the story
the same day as the Superbowl. There wasn't much time or space for
the story to get legs in America last Sunday or Monday.
What gets me most is the hypocrisy of the whole thing. We know sport
sold its soul to money long ago. But the IOC, who always espouse the
ideals of competition and sport as a means to a healthy lifestyle,
have not criticised Phelps.
All their statement said was that they had no reason to doubt the
sincerity of his apology and that he was "a great Olympic champion". Dear God.
Update: Yesterday, USA Swimming suspended Phelps from competition for
three months and cut off their financial support in that time.
Kelloggs also said it would not renew its contract with him.
Michael Phelps will escape unpunished and unscathed from his latest
misdemeanour with recreational drugs. Even the International Olympic
Committee, that supposed paragon of the anti-drug crusaders, has
accepted his apology and says he's ready to resume as a role model,
whatever one of those is.
The liberal press in US and Britain, like the Washington Post and the
Guardian, dismissed his dope-smoking as just a youthful prank,
something completely normal for a 23-year-old, especially one who's
on an extended break from training following unprecedented success at
the Olympic Games.
No action will be taken against him by world swimming body FINA. The
World Anti Doping Agency doesn't impose bans for cannabis consumed
out of competition - not that Phelps was tested anyway - and as yet
no sponsors have cancelled the contract they have with him.
So this means it's okay for the most prolific Olympic champion of all
time to smoke dope. Is that good for the Olympics? Good for sport?
Good for humanity?
Despite Phelps' statement of apology, don't we see a pattern here?
After the Athens games in 2004, he was prosecuted for drunk driving.
He was apologising back then too... never again, a bad mistake, and so it goes.
Being Michael Phelps is not easy. He has attention
deficit/hyperactivity disorder, ADHD, which means he will focus
intently on one activity for long periods of time but be easily
distracted when there is no particular ambition to achieve.
Thus, when he'd completed that quite phenomenal gold medal haul in
Beijing, the next few months were time out.
Just as he can train and compete at levels never before reached in
freestyle and butterfly, he often reaches Olympic standards in
partying too. Everybody's entitled to a good time, although any sort
of regular cannabis smoking can only be harmful for the lungs, let
alone the brain. I would have thought any half-intelligent athlete
might think of those consequences.
And when you're one of the world's more recognisable sporting faces,
and the world is awash with mobile photographic and transmitting
devices, you just have to be clever about what you do, and where you do it.
He was probably lucky that London's News of the World ran the story
the same day as the Superbowl. There wasn't much time or space for
the story to get legs in America last Sunday or Monday.
What gets me most is the hypocrisy of the whole thing. We know sport
sold its soul to money long ago. But the IOC, who always espouse the
ideals of competition and sport as a means to a healthy lifestyle,
have not criticised Phelps.
All their statement said was that they had no reason to doubt the
sincerity of his apology and that he was "a great Olympic champion". Dear God.
Update: Yesterday, USA Swimming suspended Phelps from competition for
three months and cut off their financial support in that time.
Kelloggs also said it would not renew its contract with him.
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