Thursday 17 September 2009

Cheating in sport, let's live with it?

Another day another cheating scandal in sport. Diving in football, false blood in rugby, staged crashes in Formula 1, mass indignation all around in the media and in general everyday conversation.

All these instances were about gaining an advantage, to win a game, to progress in a tournament or to win a race.

These examples reflect the pressure to compete, win and succeed whether the success is ensuring your team gets to the group stages of the Champions League(££££), the semi final of the Heineken Cup(£££) or wins a Grand Prix and sells more cars(££££££).

The pressure comes from the overriding need to deliver, on players, coaches/doctors and team management.

The Renault case is the most disturbing because a young man was allegedly asked to carry out the antithesis of his sport, crash the car rather than try to win, in the process putting himself and his competitors in potentially mortal danger.


All sad when looked through the rose tinted glasses of the Corinthian spirit that we try and engender in our kids as we teach them the importance and values of sport as a life improving activity.

Perhaps we need to add a new chapter to that book of sporting instruction. It would read something like this....when money kicks and sport becomes a business,all bets are off on the integrity front, people will do anything to win regardless of the impact on the sport and the hopes of fans and spectators, so expect it.

A simple and increasingly true perspective that perhaps we just need to acknowledge and live with it.

1 comment:

  1. It would be interesting to hear your views on how it's possible to sack a sponsor for failing to uphold the values of the brand they're sponsoring. Are there any examples of big time fallouts?

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