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Home > News > News 08.22.2007: Picker on Doping in Sports
News 08.22.2007
Competitive disadvantage
If contest moves from playing field to laboratory, athletes, sports would be hurt
By Randal C. Picker Chicago Tribune August 22, 2007
The
recent Tour de France melted down day by day as yet another leader left
the race facing accusations of doping. We still aren't sure who won
last year's race, as the inquiry regarding Floyd Landis' alleged
cheating is still pending.
And in
baseball, Barry Bonds has passed Hank Aaron's all-time home run record
amid a drumbeat of rumors that Bonds' performance has been enhanced by
steroids. We seem to be at something of a crossroads: We can enhance
athletes, but will that improve competition? It won't. My pills will
match your pills, so the games themselves won't change, but
pill-popping will saddle our heroes with a lifetime of possible medical
problems.
Both the Tour de France and
Barry Bonds cases are about defining the rules of competition and how
we move from one set of rules to another. Barry Bonds can lift weights
morning, noon and night and no one will think less of him; indeed we
will admire his dedication to his craft. But if he dopes, should we
think less of him? Or should we think that the next stage in sports
competition leaves the gym and heads, appropriately, to the laboratory?
Let the best steroid win?
We should reject
that idea, and to see that, we need to understand when competition is
and is not valuable. In the economy, competition is the lifeblood of
capitalism. Firms compete, and if all goes well, they come up with
great new products that consumers love. Over time, competition pushes
benefits to consumers, even if it doesn't bolster profits. Competitors
don't want competition, consumers do.
In
sports, competition is defined, and is done so to make each sport
entertaining. To make it a good game. If pitchers get too far ahead of
hitters, we lower the mound by 5 inches, as baseball did in 1969, to
reduce the number of 2-1 pitchers' duels. We give the teams with the
worst records the highest draft choices, not because of an inborn sense
of charity, but because we want to try to maintain competitive balance
in the league.
We should look at
lab-enhanced sports in that light. We won't improve competition much
and we may make the players much worse off. If hitters on steroids are
matched by pitchers on steroids, the game may be exactly the same as it
would be otherwise, but the players suffer. Competition over physical
enhancements can be offsetting in the way that matters most: how
entertaining the sport is. If every rider in the pack is doping in the
Tour de France, the race may move a tad faster, but the art and
excitement of the race won't change. The race is about the breakaways
and the efforts of the other riders to reel in the brave front group,
and those don't depend on raw speed. They depend on relative speed, and
that doesn't change with or without doping, so long as everyone is
playing by the same rules.
That is the key
point. One rider -- one hitter -- can gain an advantage over the
competition if he -- and, critically, he alone -- plays by different
rules.
But if every player dopes, the
competitive advantage goes away, and we are back where we started,
except now the players are burdened with the presumed medical harms of
the doping drugs. Competition over enhancements puts pressure on honest
players to cheat or risk becoming outmoded, and yet the game or the
race will end up as before if every player starts popping pills. The
players, facing a lifetime of potential harms from the doping, will be
much worse off.
Equipment in sports has
improved dramatically. When I was a kid, I remember finding a couple of
old wooden tennis rackets buried in the closet. Those were worth a
laugh, just as my kids now giggle over my T2000 (I do play with a newer
racket now). Equipment improvements may challenge the game and force
modifications -- especially of golf courses -- but they don't put the
players at risk.
We can now improve the
ultimate sports equipment, the human body itself. We could do what they
do with soft drinks, perhaps have two baseball leagues, Human Classic
and New Human (or would that be Human 2.0)? But competition would look
much the same in both leagues, as each enhancement would be matched
with a competing enhancement.
If one
enhancement actually provided a decisive advantage, we would reset the
rules, as baseball did in lowering the mound, as we want our sports to
be competitive. Pill-popping competition will make each player worse
off and yet will add nothing to the game.
That is competition we can and should do without.
Copyright 2007 Chicago Tribune Company
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