Olympic medalist, world class sprinter Edwin Moses responding to the interview by Victor Conte (here and here) let's it fly. Moses is mad as hell and he isn't taking it anymore.
Moses doesn't seem to be a fan of Conte, and the other track stars who doped. Like Carl Lewis ahead of him, Moses speaks out on corruption in his sport. Moses writes in the TimesOnLine.
Over the last two years I have watched in disgust as more and more “name brand” athletes have become ensnared in the omnipresent net that we have come to know as “testing positive” for performance-enhancing drugs. Whether each athlete implicated is guilty or not, the names form an embarrassing Who’s Who in the world of sport.
The braggadocio of Victor Conte – head of the Balco laboratory in California, who has admitted distributing steroids and who is practicing his magic arts upon the weak-minded again after being released from prison – as revealed in the pages of The Times last week, tipped the scales of my silence: it is now time for me, and for other clean, world-class athletes from every sport, to speak out loudly against the claim that doping is simply “the way it is” and the only way to the top.
To advise (as Conte does so self-servingly and despicably) that parents of kids with dreams of elite-level performance should “steer [the kids] in other directions” if they don’t want to take drugs, simply because “at some point they’ll get to the level where they are told they have no choice but to use them”, is preposterous and spineless.
Mose reiterates that hard work and tough training is required. However, he holds the record for consecutive race wins...without drug-cheating.
To reach the pinnacle of my event, the 400 metres hurdles – and to stay there without ceding victory, as I did, for nearly a decade – I did not need or want to use performance-enhancing drugs...
I invented a training regimen that included stretching, flexibility development and dynamic exercise techniques. And I was willing to deal with – for seconds, minutes, hours, days, weeks, months, years – the intense and relentless discomfort that comes from training mercilessly, two or three times a day. Through sheer focus and willpower, I made sure that the harder and more painful it got, the faster I became.
By definition, the elite level of sport is not open to just anyone. Only the very rare individual will succeed. But to suggest that drugs are a de facto key to one, two or more world-class victories is a lie. I delivered 122 consecutive victories and four world records on the basis of sweat and refined skill, period.
Moses agrees somewhat that the dopers are defeating the anti-doping authorities:
Counsel to all would-be champions: in training, there are no short cuts. Anyone who tells you differently is selling pure compromise. Infuriatingly, Conte may be correct when he says that “the ineptness of the antidoping programmers contribute to the use-or-lose mentality that athletes are almost forced into”. It is true, the system that we initiated in the fall of 1988 is in critical need of reform – and, moreover, requires resources to design and sustain reform...
As one of the few active athletes with experience both in front of and behind the scenes, I can attest that the integrity of drug-testing operations has always been threatened by unscrupulous people in search of a fast dollar, an association with fame, a secure seat on a privileged board or an uncomplicated ride on the twisting back of a corporate sponsor. The appropriate response to corruption is not to exploit the problems for personal gain, but to insist upon and drive home significant and sustainable improvements. Both the public and private sectors need to invest in this effort. The public, too, needs to demand change.
The values of honest sportsmanship, a level playing field, clean competition and sheer passion for the game that Laureus represents are the values that must propel me and others like me to speak out against characters like Conte, his cronies, his clients – and the systems and stakeholders that enable their crooked work. If we fail to take a stand for sport as we love it and once practiced it, our legacy will be mean indeed.
Edwin Moses won gold medals in the 400 metres hurdles at the 1976 and 1984 Olympics. Between 1977 and 1987 he achieved the longest winning streak in athletics history, 122 races.
I was a former track and cross country athlete and still love the sports. I'm wondering if there is an organization out there that works with kids or elite athletes about not using performance enhancing drugs?
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