HONOLULU, HI - In an unusual gathering of track and field
athletes at a major marathon expo, three Olympic medalists and one
U.S. champion vented their frustration over Victor Conte's central
allegation made on the ABC News program 20/20 last Friday that the
Olympic Games are "a fraud.""The 20/20 segment was a complete disgrace," said a visibly agitated
Adam Nelson, the Olympic silver medalist in the shot put. He then
added, "the Olympics are not a fraud."
Nelson, flanked by Olympic decathlon silver medalist, Bryan Clay, U.S.
high jump champion and fourth place Olympic finisher, Jamie Nieto, and
Olympic long jump gold medalist, Dwight Philips, challenged the media
to be more balanced in their reporting on the unfolding drugs scandal in
athletics.
Of Conte's fraud comment, Nelson said that it "totally discounts what
[clean Olympic athletes] do on a daily basis."
"We pride ourselvs on what we do," chimed in Clay, the only Olympic
medalist to be born in the state of Hawaii. "We've worked so hard to get
where we are. We did it cleanly."
The panel's frustration demonstrates the flip side of all the attention
which the media has placed on reporting on drugs cheats and scandals.
While the additional attention will no doubt help keep the heat on
cheaters and should untimately help in the difficult clean up the sport so
desperately needs, it also marginalizes the overwhelming percentage of
athletes who are clean, which Nelson estimated at 90% to 95%. In
essence, they are robbed twice by the drug cheats.
When Nelson tells people he has just met that he is an Olympic shot
putter, the impact of the negative publicity of the Balco scandal
immediately hits home. "Do you know what the first question is?" an
exasperated Nelson said. "Are you on steroids?"
Nelson was the most vocal in taking to task U.S. professional sports for
not cleaning up their own houses, and indicted mainstream sports
marketers for making heroes out of athletes who have used
performance enhancing drugs. He spoke of when baseball slugger
Mark McGuire admitted to taking Androstenedione (an anabolic
precurser) there was a spike in use of steroids by high school athletes.
McGuire's status as a hero was barely tarnished, and the public outcry
against McGuire was muted at best. Just a handful of journalists called
for baseball to adopt an Olympic-style drug testing program, with strict
liability and random testing, and a few even defended the sport's lack of
such a program.
"Open up your eyes folks," said Nelson, his amplified voice penetrating
the cavernous space of the Hawaii Convention Center. "Don't let this
happen."
The high jumper Nieto said that the problem should be approached
more like a criminal matter, and said that jail time would be a more
effective deterent than the sanctions of sports federations. He
mentioned that taking steroids without a prescription was illegal (as was
selling them), and that trying to win money and fame using performance
enhancing substances was a fraud, like any other. "I feel like those
athletes are stealing from me," said Nieto who is sometimes mistaken for
the actor, Will Smith.
As for Philips, he was frustrated that Conte himself had been inflated
into more of a celebrity than a legitimate Olympic champion.
"I'm an Olympic gold medalist and Victor Conte is more well-known than
I am," said Phillips. "We don't get the attention that we deserve."