Pubdate: Wed, 18 Feb 2009 Source: Cochrane Times (CN AB) Copyright: 2009 Osprey Media Contact: http://www.cochranetimes.com/feedback1/LetterToEditor.aspx Website: http://www.cochranetimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1588 Author: Reagen Sulewski Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?420 (Cannabis - Popular) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/michael+phelps PHELPS, A-ROD SHOW DOUBLE STANDARDS Two world-class athletes have been involved in drug scandals in the last two weeks, and the disparity between the actions and the punishments highlight a strange hypocrisy in the world of pro sports with regards to drugs. Earlier this month, eight-time Olympic gold medal winning swimmer Michael Phelps was embarrassed publically after photographs were released showing him apparently smoking what could be marijuana from a bong at a college party. Shortly afterwards, a report came out indicating that New York Yankee slugger Alex Rodriguez had tested positive for steroid use in 2003, as a part of a preliminary drug survey for Major League Baseball. Both athletes went into the expected damage control modes, Phelps by apologizing for his indiscretion, Rodriguez by fessing up to using steroids from 2000 to 2003 while he was with the Texas Rangers. So essentially, both athletes were apologizing for getting caught. But they've both been tied together through circumstance and by their punishments (or lack thereof) - Phelps by being suspended for three months from the US swim team and the loss of a sponsorship from Kellogg's, and Rodriguez . . . well he's not getting punished at all. The inequity of these results is clear given the difference between the drugs in question and their effects on their sports. It seems rather obvious that marijuana offers no performance-enhancing qualities towards swimming, and if anything would hurt a swimmer. It is, of course, an illicit drug, but one that society has a confusing attitude towards. A 2008 survey by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime indicated that over 17 per cent of Canadians and 12 per cent of Americans between the ages of 18 to 64 used cannabis in one form or another during the previous year. That puts it almost on the same level as tobacco use, which was 18 per cent in 2008, according to Health Canada. As well, support for legalization, or decriminalization of marijuana continues to grow, with some surveys giving it the support of a majority of Canadians. While neither tobacco nor marijuana is exactly healthy, it's clear that society's viewpoint on pot is changing towards growing approval. Canada went through it's own Olympic marijuana scandal of its own with Ross Regabliati in 1998, after the gold-medal winning snowboarder was found to have traces of pot in his system. Initially stripped of his medal, cooler heads prevailed to reinstate him, and Regabliati eventually went on to have a sport and country-appropriate marketing deal. That we'd essentially be back at square one 11 years later is surprising. Let's face it, 23-year-olds - especially those that have cash to spare - are going to smoke pot. Pretending that Phelps is going to be a saint because he won a bunch of medals is foolish. Thankfully, the overzealous South Carolina sheriff who wanted to charge Phelps with ... something, anything, has backed off. Meanwhile, Rodriguez's steroid use will go unpunished by baseball because it occurred before there was an official penalty for them, which is just as good as allowing them. So he gets off scot-free on a technicality. And while the ultimate performance-enhancing effect of steroids on baseball isn't really known, it's clear that at least the intent of them is get an edge on other players, going right to the heart of the integrity of the sport, with the sport itself sharing some of the blame for turning a blind eye for so long, but surely, this has to rank as the greater offense. Rodriguez claims he's now clean, and while that's probably true, it's hard to say that he can ever really be trusted again. Perhaps he's saved his Hall of Fame eligibility by copping to the use instead of stonewalling, but that's up to baseball writers, to believe. In the meantime, he's earned $250-million-plus from playing baseball and will continue to earn big bucks for the remainder of his career, while Phelps has suffered financially and professionally for an act that had nothing to do with his performance in the pool, and for something that a good portion of the public doesn't have a problem with. The two actions are difficult to reconcile, in terms of both the public reaction and their consequences to the athletes involved, and it's time for sports to take a look at which actions really deserve punishment, and which deserve nothing more than a yawn. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin