The Enhanced Games is a planned international sports event where the athletes will not be subject to drug testing. It is headed by Aron D'Souza, Australian businessman, and meant to take place in December 2024.[1][2][3] Reactions from the sporting world has been generally negative.[4]
The Enhanced Games is meant to be the first event of its kind to support performance enhancing drugs and not follow the rules of the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA).[5] Performance enhancing drugs will not be mandatory for participants.[6][7] Such an event has been discussed hypothetically for many years, but never been realised.[8][9][10] Prosthetic limbs and shoe technology will be allowed.[4]
The event/organisation was announced in June 2023, is intended to be annual and to include track and field, swimming, weightlifting, gymnastics and combat sports. Originally planned for December 2024, a specific date and location are not set as of July 2023,[11][12][13] and the number of athletes "maybe a couple of thousand" according to a representative.[1] Brett Fraser, chief athletics officer of the organisation, says that the planned included sports are a "core suite of products", and can be improved upon in the future.[7] The scale will depend on funding and the location is planned to be a university campus or similar facility in the southern United States.[14] Aron D'Souza, president of the organisation, said in early 2024 that he now had the equity capital to fund the first event.[4]
By August 2023, representatives were saying that what would take place in 2024 would be a smaller "exhibition", with a "full event" taking place in 2025.[10][13] CNN said in October 2023 that it was an open question whether the games would ever take place.[14]
Aron D'Souza, Australian businessman based in London, is president of the privately funded organisation.[15][1][5] He says he had the idea for the Enhanced Games in 2022, when noticing that many people at an American gym were obviously using steroids.[13] He was involved in the 2013 Bollea v. Gawker lawsuit, which led to Gawker filing for bankruptcy. In 2015, he co-founded Sargon Capital with Phillip Kingston.[16][17] D'Souza says
Athletes are adults ... and they have a right to do with their body what they wish - my body, my choice; your body, your choice, ... And no government, no paternalistic sports federation, should be making those decisions for athletes - particularly around products that are FDA regulated and approved.[1]
If we cut out all the waste, the layers of bureaucracy, the needless building of infrastructure, this event can be delivered for virtually nothing, and we can use all the surplus profits to pay the athletes, to invest in R&D, build better and better technology and build a bigger and bigger event.[4]
D'Souza sees the International Olympic Committee (IOC) as corrupt and greedy, and wants to eradicate the WADA, which he calls an "anti-science police force for the IOC." He also argues that the Olympic system doesn't pay athletes enough.[4]
Olympians attached to the organisation include Brett Fraser, Roland Schoeman and Christina Smith.[18][8] Other people include geneticist George Church.[5][19]
Fraser stated that over five hundred athletes had contacted him, asking for more information.[7] D'Souza says he has 500 "sleeper athletes" who are "breaking world records in their basement and sending us videos of it", ready for competition.[13] CNN commented in October 2023 that so far none of these athletes appeared willing to speak publicly.[14]
The IOC responded that the "idea does not merit any comment" to a request for comment.[19][14] The Australian Olympic Committee called the idea "dangerous and irresponsible."[20][21] A representative of the Swedish Olympic Committee said "I see it as ill-conceived, short-sighted and foolhardy and something other than sport."[22] UK Anti-Doping said in a statement that "UKAD's mission is to protect sport from doping cheats. There is no place in sport for performance enhancing drugs, nor the Enhanced Games."[23] Travis Tygart, CEO of the United States Anti-Doping Agency (USADA), said "farcical … likely illegal in many [US] states" and "a dangerous clown show, not real sport."[14]
Cyclist and Olympic gold medallist Anna Meares said "Unfair, unsafe — I just don't think this is the right way to go about sport."[15] Cyclist Joseph M. Papp, suspended for doping in 2006, referred to a 1988 Weekend Update skit saying "I don't think you'd actually see guys tearing their arms off ... A doping free-for-all just invites the most ambitious person to be the most reckless person, and to take the most drugs possible without literally killing themselves."[7][24] Badminton player Susan Egelstaff stated "It cannot, and will not work. The danger is massive."[25]
Andy Miah, professor of science communication and future media at the University of Salford, called the Enhanced Games a "provocation", saying that "... the significant risk of athletes excessively enhancing and risking significant health complications is unaddressed by their materials. There is no mention of medical oversight in the competition on the website, from what I can see." Fraser said that "Each athlete must be under clinical supervision."[12][7] and according to D’Souza, "We will focus on athlete safety by mandating athletes have pre-competition full-system clinical screenings including blood tests and EKGs."[14] Science writer Ronald Bailey said "Let fans decide which play they prefer."[5] Grigory Rodchenkov, former head of the Moscow Anti-Doping Laboratory, said it was a "danger to health, to sport."[14]
The Spectator opined that "In any discipline, we seek only to discover who is the fastest, or the strongest, the most accurate or the most coordinated. What's absolutely crucial, at least as far as retaining spectator interest goes, is that the advantage is natural."[26] The Daily Telegraph's sports writer commented that "Remarkably it seems a more fleshed-out idea than the European Super League".[3] The Conversation said that "In a sporting world in which inequality of opportunity is already rampant, the removal of the doping ban would only deepen an existing moral failing."[27] Cyclist wondered who would be willing to sponsor the event, noting that as of late July, no sponsors were mentioned on the Enhanced Game's website.[7] D'Souza stated in early 2024 that the organisation had "raised money from some of the most famous venture capitalists in history".[4] The Globe and Mail's journalist said "I will admit, I am incredibly curious to see an "enhanced" person running faster than Usain Bolt, or swimming better than Michael Phelps. But I would not want to be that person, and I bet that neither will the serious athletes who have so far managed to avoid doping infractions."[28] The Independent said that while the sporting world has been mostly dismissive, "D’Souza is intelligent and well-connected, and he has brought down big targets before. So when he says it’s going to happen, he is deadly serious."[4]
![]() | Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enhanced Games.
Read more |