Winning At All Costs . . . . . . A Good Strategy?
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Late last week, Lance Armstrong, the winner of seven consecutive titles (1999-2005) of the world's most grueling bike race - The Tour de France, finally confessed to something many people had suspected for years - The use of performance enhancing steroids during most of his storied career, to get an edge over his competitors.
What is even more disillusioning is that it was not just he but his entire team of 11 cyclists, that used the drugs, which were administered to them by the team's physicians with the full blessing and knowledge of the coach. And, it gets worse.
When Emma O'Reilly, the team's former masseuse tried to expose his secret, he bullied her into submission by filing a defamation lawsuit against her, for spreading vicious rumors.
When asked why he did not just come clean after the initial accusations, the athlete responded that he got caught up in his own legend - The superhero that had survived cancer and made an amazing comeback. Sadly enough over the years, he had managed to convince himself that he was not really doing anything wrong.
Even after all his former teammates testified against him to the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency, which resulted in him being stripped of all his seven titles in October 2011 and a lifetime ban on competitive cycling, Armstrong kept asserting his innocence.
As to why he finally decided to come clean in a two-part interview with talk show host Oprah Winfrey on national television, is anyone's guess. The sad part is he is not the only prominent athlete to have done this - In 2007, US Olympic sprinter Marion Jones was stripped of all her five gold medals and banned from the track for 2 years. Earlier this year, former San Francisco Giants outfielder Barry Bonds, was denied a place in the Baseball Hall of Fame because of suspicions that he too used steroids during his tenure with the team - An allegation that he still steadfastly denies - And, the list goes on and on.
While we all want to win and get famous the big question that comes to mind is that since when has sports become only about winning? What happened to sportsmanship, ethics and integrity? As sports journalist Grantland Rice succinctly put it 'It's not that you won or lost but how you played the game" - These role models certainly didn't play it the right way! Don't you agree?
Resources: cnn.com, abcnews.com
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194 Comments
- cnewmanalmost 12 yearsWonder why he won the tour de France 5x and 2007 olympics
- bobalmost 12 yearsi dont like him any more
- bababababababaalmost 12 yearswhy did come clean now??
- wayfalaalmost 12 yearsnever trusted this guy
- dreamincoloralmost 12 yearsWhy didn't Oprah do this earlier?
- bailablejet40almost 12 yearsthis is uninteresting
- dogguy234almost 12 yearsI really think Armstrong shouldn't have been stripped from those titles, although what he did was wrong. I mean, even for ppl who take drugs like that can't win most of the time!! It takes determination and interest to win something like that, not drugs. So I still look up to Lance Armstrong. Sorry for ppl who don't agree! :)
- asianrocks13almost 12 yearswhy'd he do it wwwwwwwwhhhhhhhhhyyyyyy :*(
- itysttalmost 12 yearsi agree, even though he did something terribly wrong, he shouldn't have been banned to do something he loves, that is unfair and he shouldn't be stripped from those titles, but still he did something wrong.
- dogguy234almost 12 yearsand also another thing against that though is that the person who came second cud hv came first
- mystery almost 12 yearsI had just learned about him. At first this article sounded cool but knowing someone would do that is sad
- Salmost 12 yearsWinning at all costs is not a good strategy. I used to think he was amazing! Now he is just awful.
- Salmost 12 yearsThat is so unfair to the other bikers!