
Anti-doping watchdog urges US authorities to shut down planned drug-fueled event in Las Vegas
'We will urge the U.S. authorities to find legal ways to block this initiative,' World Anti-Doping Agency president Witold Banka said on the sidelines of a meeting of Olympic sports bodies.
Organizers of the games scheduled next May promise $1 million bonuses to beat world record times by athletes who will be encouraged to use performance-enhancing drugs under medical supervision.
'This initiative seeks to normalize the use of potentially dangerous drugs,' Banka told leaders of Summer Olympics sports at the annual meeting of their umbrella group, known as ASOIF.
'For the sake of athlete health and the purity of sport of course it must be stopped,' the WADA leader said.
Banka, a former sports minister in Poland, suggested the Enhanced Games could be legally exposed in the state of Nevada or federally.
'This is something that has to be explored from the legal perspective,' he told The Associated Press. 'I cannot imagine, for instance, doctors giving the drugs to the athletes. It is completely against the values of their work.'
'The main thing is this event is going to be located in the U.S. so I think there is a strong role to be played by the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency,' said Banka, whose Montreal-based organization has long had a troubled relationship with the American agency.
USADA's chief executive, Travis Tygart, has described the Enhanced Games as a 'dangerous clown show that puts profit over principle.'
Investors in the project — which aims to sell personalized supplements and substances plans to subscribers — include one group backed by Donald Trump Jr.
The doping-backed project was 'very embarrassing' for the U.S., Banka suggested, given its proximity to the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics.
'I think the main responsibility is on USADA's shoulders, who need to take the lead because it is in their country,' he said.
Swimming's governing body World Aquatics said last week it will ban athletes, coaches and officials who take part in the Enhanced Games.
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Indian Express
5 minutes ago
- Indian Express
The making of Vincent: How Peter Leko's bond helped Keymer's rise to the chess elite
Tarvisio is a small border town in Udine province, nestled between Slovenia and Austria. A popular yet remote tourist destination, it once hosted the Under-20 Chess World Championship, where a 12-year-old Vincent Keymer, touted as the next big thing from Germany after the legendary Emanuel Lasker, teamed up with Hungarian great Peter Leko for the first time. Back then, neither Vincent, who was still not even a teenager, nor Peter knew they would form a bond that would last for years. 'It's true that Vincent is like family. It's not just a professional trainer-student or Second-player relationship; he's more like a family member to me. And well, it's a long history,' says a chuffed Peter, unable to hide his pride after his protégé, now a grown man, defeated a world-class field to win the Chennai Grand Masters tournament in India. Vincent had just crushed young American GM Ray Robson in the final round, finishing with an impressive 7.0/9, a full two points ahead of second-placed Anish Giri. His dominance was such that he had clinched the title with a round to spare. Along the way, he broke into the world's top 10 and crossed the elusive 2750 Elo rating mark for the very first time. 'It was 30 or 40 years ago when I was young player coming up, I had a very difficult time in Hungary finding sponsorships and I struggled financially because the country was poor. But thanks to Germany I got my sponsorships and through that support, I became the player I am so I always had that feeling to pay back what I'd received,' says Peter Leko to The Indian Express. Peter met Vincent in 2017, when he felt his own career had peaked and there was little left to achieve that he hadn't already. That's when he was asked to accompany Vincent as a coach for the World Under-20 Championship that November. At Freestyle Chess we have a lot of players here with their supporters. Some with their better halves and some with their trainers. One relationship that has grown over 7.5 years, is the beautiful trainer and student relationship between Peter Leko and Vincent Keymer. Check it… — ChessBase India (@ChessbaseIndia) April 12, 2025 Talking about the trip, Peter says, 'It was a tough journey… I was travelling from Hungary, Vincent was coming from Germany. After 8-9 hours, we finally reached Tarvisio late at night. Once we settled in, I asked if he wanted to come over. I thought it'd be good to understand his thinking. I asked him to show me one of his games and there was this enthusiasm in him – even after nine hours travelling he was still very interested, explained every move, his thoughts, his feelings and in that moment, I knew he was extremely impressive talent. He had an innate understanding of harmony in chess.' Peter was so impressed that he called his wife that same night and said, 'This will be a very long cooperation.' 'I actually went to Tarvisio because I wanted to check out if Vincent is really so talented as they say, or is he just another German talent?' he recalls. Six months later, Vincent proved himself by winning the Grenke Open with a stunning 8.0/9, defeating stars like Richard Rapport in a major breakthrough. The high of 2018 was not followed by smooth sailing. While the world recognised Vincent's special talent, and he himself was growing stronger, he was still searching for his next big breakthrough. That moment came in 2022, when he won a silver medal at the World Rapid Championship, finishing only behind Norwegian maestro Magnus Carlsen. Vincent is among a rare few who have troubled Carlsen seriously and consistently. In 2023, he first stunned Carlsen in the first leg of their fourth round match of World Cup 2023 (although Carlsen won the round eventually). 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Praggnanandhaa and Nodirbek Abdusattorov has also played a role in shaping Vincent's psyche. 'Gukesh is a World Champion at 18, Praggnanandhaa is among the elite, Abdusattorov has been in the world's top 10 for quite some time,' Peter notes. 'Vincent thinks… 'Wait a second, I'm not worse than these guys. If they can succeed, why can't I?'' Peter breaks down Vincent's playing style, describing him as a natural strategist. Unlike India's Arjun Erigaisi, who thrives in chaotic positions, Vincent seeks harmony on the board. 'He's clearly a great strategist. He prefers complex battles, is very ambitious, and always looks for a fight… but not in a chaotic way,' Peter analyses. 'He seeks harmony in positions and once he achieves it, he's unstoppable. His style depends on imposing his will on the opponent.' 'I understand that when a player suddenly makes a breakthrough, people ask, 'What's the secret? But usually, there is no secret sauce. That's the trick. It's continuous growth. You don't suddenly become a completely different player overnight. You already have an extremely high level inside you, and then, based on small extra factors, it comes to life.'
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Business Standard
6 minutes ago
- Business Standard
$1M prize, star players at 2025 US Open mixed doubles; But some are upset
Grand Slam singles champions such as Jannik Sinner, Carlos Alcaraz, Iga Swiatek and Madison Keys will be playing for a little extra money OK, a lot of extra money, by any standard: $1 million to the winning duo and trying to get their hands on a trophy in the U.S. Open's overhauled mixed doubles tournament. The best of the best at doubles, meanwhile, are not so excited about what one of last year's mixed champions in New York, Sara Errani, labeled sad and "nonsense in an interview with The Associated Press. She and Andrea Vavassori, who'll be defending their title, are the only true doubles team competing Tuesday and Wednesday at Flushing Meadows. A year ago, only two highly ranked singles players participated. It would be like if, at the Olympics, they didn't let the actual high jumpers participate, and instead had basketball players compete in the high jump because it's more interesting.' If you want to do that, I guess you can, but you can't award them medals," Errani said. "You can't have a Grand Slam doubles (trophy) and not let doubles players take part. ... You're excluding them from their sport. It's dishonest. Who is playing in the 2025 U.S. Open mixed doubles tournament? The top seeds, based on their combined singles rankings, are Jessica Pegula, the 2024 U.S. Open runner-up, and Jack Draper, a semifinalist a year ago. He's onto his third partner after Olympic champion Zheng Qinwen and former No. 2 Paula Badosa withdrew with injuries. Their initial opponents might be the most-anticipated pairing: five-time Slam champ Alcaraz and 2021 U.S. Open winner Emma Raducanu. Other teams include Sinner and 10-time major doubles champion Katerina Siniakova, Swiatek and Casper Ruud, Keys and Frances Tiafoe, Venus Williams and Reilly Opelka, Taylor Fritz and Elena Rybakina, Naomi Osaka and Gael Monfils, Novak Djokovic and Olga Danilovic, and Daniil Medvedev and Mirra Andreeva. It's going to count as a real Grand Slam. The prize money is great, said Fritz, the runner-up to Sinner in singles at Flushing Meadows a year ago. We are 100% there to try to win it. Said Tiafoe: Seeing the prize money, everyone was like, We're going, no matter what.' What is different about mixed doubles at the U.S. Open? What's different? Put plainly: everything. That includes the top prize of $1 million a year after Errani and Vavassori split $200,000. Even the rules are changing, with sets played to four games instead of six until Wednesday's final, no-Ad scoring, and match tiebreakers instead of a third set. There are 16 teams instead of 32. The matches were shifted from the latter stages of the U.S. Open, overlapping with singles, to before next Sunday's start of the main singles brackets. Half the field is based on singles rankings, and the other half was simply chosen by the U.S. Tennis Association. That's how the singles stars got involved. It's also why some say the whole thing is a bit silly. Gaby Dabrowski, a Canadian who owns two major championships in mixed doubles and earned the women's doubles trophy at the 2023 U.S. Open, tried to get into the field with Felix Auger-Aliassime, but they were not among the USTA's wild-card selections. Do I think it's a true mixed doubles championship? No. Do I think it could help the sport of doubles in the end? It could, Dabrowski said, but not if you can't have any doubles players play in it. Why are some players upset about the U.S. Open mixed doubles changes? Like Errani or Dabrowski, doubles players aren't thrilled about being excluded and losing out on a payday. They also think it's generally demeaning to doubles specialists even if the USTA thinks this can help boost the popularity of doubles. When you get the biggest names playing doubles, it does bring a bit more attention to it, said Joe Salisbury, a British player who's won two Grand Slam titles in mixed doubles and four in men's doubles, but I'm not sure it's good for the doubles event, because it's not really a proper event. It's just a two-day exhibition. Tournament director Stacey Allaster objects to that sort of characterization. Let's be absolutely crystal clear: This is a Grand Slam championship. It is not an exhibition, Allaster said. We're sympathetic to the doubles specialists who don't like this change. ... (But) we know that when fans see top players competing ... this is going to inspire more fans to not only attend but to play tennis, and it's ultimately going to grow the sport. (Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)


India Today
3 hours ago
- India Today
Indian woman triple jumper suspended by NADA on doping charges
A woman triple jumper, who has won multiple national-level medals and even represented the country internationally, has been suspended by the National Anti-Doping Agency (NADA) after testing positive for a prohibited jumper, who is in her 30s, had also competed in the Hangzhou Asian Games in 2023, a source in the Athletics Federation of India told athlete's identity is being withheld for now. Also not clear at this point is the banned substance for which she tested The latest failed test continues the alarmingly regular dope setbacks for India's August 11, National Games gold-winning discus thrower Gagandeep Singh was among a bunch of athletes across sports who were handed three-year bans by NADA after they accepted their offence within 20 days of being Services, Singh had won gold in men's discus with a best throw of 55.01m at the Uttarakhand National Games on February 12. He later tested positive for testosterone metabolites and was handed provisional per the 2023 testing figures released by the World Anti-Doping Agency, India's positivity rate for banned substances stood at 3.8 per cent -- 214 Adverse Analytical Findings (AAF) from 5606 the 5606 tests, 2748 were conducted positivity rate for banned substances is significantly higher than China, USA , France , Germany and Russia. All these countries have a positivity rate of one per cent or per WADA numbers, athletics leads the number of India's positive cases with 61 AAFs from 1223 samples.- Ends