Ethical question - drugs in sport. : Fri Oct 01, 2010 2:34 pm
Now, let me be clear before I start – on the field I loved Terry Newton for GB, loved to hate him for Wigan – had the pleasure of meeting him a couple of times and found him a great guy, funny and his loss is a loss to the sport he was obviously well liked by colleagues, because he has received many private tributes personally to his family as opposed to in the press...... Obviously his loss is crushing for his family and as a father myself, my heart goes out to them – this thread has nothing to do with his personal tragedy or that of his family, but it has had me thinking in the wider context.So my point:
How can a sport win I guess; if someone breaks the rules, there must be sanction and sanction which is punitive. Taking drugs in sport is not like speeding or theft, people who do it all 100% know what they are doing and why and what the consequences are be they Ryan Hudson, Ben Johnson , Floyd Landis or whoever....... Contador!
So, if people are not excluded and cast out of their sport and they are kept in the sport, looked after and work as advisors on education programs – that might help them earn, stay involved and serve their ban – but doesn’t that show a soft stance and send a mixed message that it is not allowed in the sport???? If you are caught we will look after you until you can come back again? This from a distance seems to be how Hock is being treated by Wigan, he is still working under the club banner in an educational capacity (not judging him either or accusing Wigan - just for instance).
The alternate is as the criticism seems to have been levelled at the RFL regarding Terry Netwon that he wasn’t well cared for. But that is the sanction, out of the sport.
So, got me thinking what I would do as head of the RFL – Personally, I think that zero tolerance is the only way, every player who signs on in every club at whatever level knows the difference between hard graft and training and taking drugs, people don’t do it by mistake and if found I think people have to be knowing and willing, it is not usually like that skiing dude who won a bronze medal a few years ago then got banned for taking a hay fever remedy – Alain Baxter, clearly there has to be sense.
Not sure? Thoughts??