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World Aquatics to ban participants of controversial Enhanced Games
World Aquatics to ban participants of controversial Enhanced Games

Yahoo

time5 days ago

  • Health
  • Yahoo

World Aquatics to ban participants of controversial Enhanced Games

Greek swimmer Kristian Gkolomeev is one of the names involved in the new competition. - Enhanced Ltd. World Aquatics, the governing body for all aquatic sports, has introduced a new rule that will ban those who participate in the controversial Enhanced Games. The Enhanced Games says it is an 'alternative' to the Olympics and will allow athletes to use performance-enhancing drugs. Participants will not be tested and will be under no obligation to declare which substances they have taken in order to compete. Advertisement The inaugural games will take place in May 2026 and include events from swimming, weightlifting and athletics. On Tuesday, World Aquatics released a statement introducing the new bylaw, which will be in effect immediately. 'Under the new Bylaw, individuals who support, endorse, or participate in sporting events that embrace the use of scientific advancements or other practices that may include prohibited substances and/or prohibited methods will not be eligible to hold positions with World Aquatics or to participate in any World Aquatics competitions, events, or other activities,' the federation said in a statement. 'This ineligibility would apply to roles such as athlete, coach, team official, administrator, medical support staff, or government representative.' Advertisement World Aquatics added that it would ban people on a case-by-case basis, while also encouraging federations at a national level to adopt a similar stance. 'Those who enable doped sport are not welcome at World Aquatics or our events,' said World Aquatics President Husain Al Musallam. 'This new Bylaw ensures that we can continue to protect the integrity of our competitions, the health and safety of our athletes, and the credibility of the global aquatics community.' In response to the ban, Enhanced Games' president and founder Aron D'Souza said his organization stands with 'athletes and their support teams.' Advertisement 'At the Enhanced Games, athletes have what traditional federations never gave them: choice, fairness, and real money,' he said in a statement sent to CNN Sports. Kristian Gkolomeev has already gone under the current world record in the men's 50m - Enhanced Ltd. 'We offer a medically supervised, safety-focused, science-driven arena – where performance is rewarded, not policed by outdated ideology. 'This ban isn't about protecting athletes. It's about protecting a monopoly.' Since the start of the controversial program, Greek swimmer Kristian Gkolomeev swam the men's 50 meters freestyle in 20.89 seconds, shaving 0.02 seconds off the long-standing world record, per Reuters Gkolomeev finished fifth in the same event at the Paris Olympics last year. Advertisement But the competition has been widely criticized, including by those from a health perspective. Dr. Grigory Rodchenkov, who exposed Russia's state-sponsored doping program – a massive, years-long effort which benefited more than 1,000 athletes between 2011 and 2015 – previously said that the new event is a 'danger to health, to sport.' Similarly, Travis Tygart, the CEO at the United States Anti-Doping Agency, previously told CNN Sports that the concept was 'a dangerous clown show, not real sport.' In the statement sent to CNN Sports Wednesday, the Enhanced Games said: 'Our mission is to protect and improve athlete well-being for those pushing the limits of human performance, and we have extensive safeguards in place to ensure we uphold this value.' For more CNN news and newsletters create an account at

World Aquatics to ban participants of controversial Enhanced Games
World Aquatics to ban participants of controversial Enhanced Games

CNN

time5 days ago

  • Health
  • CNN

World Aquatics to ban participants of controversial Enhanced Games

World Aquatics, the governing body for all aquatic sports, has introduced a new rule that will ban those who participate in the controversial Enhanced Games. The Enhanced Games says it is an 'alternative' to the Olympics and will allow athletes to use performance-enhancing drugs. Participants will not be tested and will be under no obligation to declare which substances they have taken in order to compete. The inaugural games will take place in May 2026 and include events from swimming, weightlifting and athletics. On Tuesday, World Aquatics released a statement introducing the new bylaw, which will be in effect immediately. 'Under the new Bylaw, individuals who support, endorse, or participate in sporting events that embrace the use of scientific advancements or other practices that may include prohibited substances and/or prohibited methods will not be eligible to hold positions with World Aquatics or to participate in any World Aquatics competitions, events, or other activities,' the federation said in a statement. 'This ineligibility would apply to roles such as athlete, coach, team official, administrator, medical support staff, or government representative.' World Aquatics added that it would ban people on a case-by-case basis, while also encouraging federations at a national level to adopt a similar stance. 'Those who enable doped sport are not welcome at World Aquatics or our events,' said World Aquatics President Husain Al Musallam. 'This new Bylaw ensures that we can continue to protect the integrity of our competitions, the health and safety of our athletes, and the credibility of the global aquatics community.' In response to the ban, Enhanced Games' president and founder Aron D'Souza said his organization stands with 'athletes and their support teams.' 'At the Enhanced Games, athletes have what traditional federations never gave them: choice, fairness, and real money,' he said in a statement sent to CNN Sports. 'We offer a medically supervised, safety-focused, science-driven arena – where performance is rewarded, not policed by outdated ideology. 'This ban isn't about protecting athletes. It's about protecting a monopoly.' Since the start of the controversial program, Greek swimmer Kristian Gkolomeev swam the men's 50 meters freestyle in 20.89 seconds, shaving 0.02 seconds off the long-standing world record, per Reuters Gkolomeev finished fifth in the same event at the Paris Olympics last year. But the competition has been widely criticized, including by those from a health perspective. Dr. Grigory Rodchenkov, who exposed Russia's state-sponsored doping program – a massive, years-long effort which benefited more than 1,000 athletes between 2011 and 2015 – previously said that the new event is a 'danger to health, to sport.' Similarly, Travis Tygart, the CEO at the United States Anti-Doping Agency, previously told CNN Sports that the concept was 'a dangerous clown show, not real sport.' In the statement sent to CNN Sports Wednesday, the Enhanced Games said: 'Our mission is to protect and improve athlete well-being for those pushing the limits of human performance, and we have extensive safeguards in place to ensure we uphold this value.'

World Aquatics to ban participants of controversial Enhanced Games
World Aquatics to ban participants of controversial Enhanced Games

CNN

time5 days ago

  • Health
  • CNN

World Aquatics to ban participants of controversial Enhanced Games

World Aquatics, the governing body for all aquatic sports, has introduced a new rule that will ban those who participate in the controversial Enhanced Games. The Enhanced Games says it is an 'alternative' to the Olympics and will allow athletes to use performance-enhancing drugs. Participants will not be tested and will be under no obligation to declare which substances they have taken in order to compete. The inaugural games will take place in May 2026 and include events from swimming, weightlifting and athletics. On Tuesday, World Aquatics released a statement introducing the new bylaw, which will be in effect immediately. 'Under the new Bylaw, individuals who support, endorse, or participate in sporting events that embrace the use of scientific advancements or other practices that may include prohibited substances and/or prohibited methods will not be eligible to hold positions with World Aquatics or to participate in any World Aquatics competitions, events, or other activities,' the federation said in a statement. 'This ineligibility would apply to roles such as athlete, coach, team official, administrator, medical support staff, or government representative.' World Aquatics added that it would ban people on a case-by-case basis, while also encouraging federations at a national level to adopt a similar stance. 'Those who enable doped sport are not welcome at World Aquatics or our events,' said World Aquatics President Husain Al Musallam. 'This new Bylaw ensures that we can continue to protect the integrity of our competitions, the health and safety of our athletes, and the credibility of the global aquatics community.' In response to the ban, Enhanced Games' president and founder Aron D'Souza said his organization stands with 'athletes and their support teams.' 'At the Enhanced Games, athletes have what traditional federations never gave them: choice, fairness, and real money,' he said in a statement sent to CNN Sports. 'We offer a medically supervised, safety-focused, science-driven arena – where performance is rewarded, not policed by outdated ideology. 'This ban isn't about protecting athletes. It's about protecting a monopoly.' Since the start of the controversial program, Greek swimmer Kristian Gkolomeev swam the men's 50 meters freestyle in 20.89 seconds, shaving 0.02 seconds off the long-standing world record, per Reuters Gkolomeev finished fifth in the same event at the Paris Olympics last year. But the competition has been widely criticized, including by those from a health perspective. Dr. Grigory Rodchenkov, who exposed Russia's state-sponsored doping program – a massive, years-long effort which benefited more than 1,000 athletes between 2011 and 2015 – previously said that the new event is a 'danger to health, to sport.' Similarly, Travis Tygart, the CEO at the United States Anti-Doping Agency, previously told CNN Sports that the concept was 'a dangerous clown show, not real sport.' In the statement sent to CNN Sports Wednesday, the Enhanced Games said: 'Our mission is to protect and improve athlete well-being for those pushing the limits of human performance, and we have extensive safeguards in place to ensure we uphold this value.'

Australia's Enhanced Games duo face global swim bans
Australia's Enhanced Games duo face global swim bans

The Advertiser

time6 days ago

  • Health
  • The Advertiser

Australia's Enhanced Games duo face global swim bans

Australian coach Brett Hawke and swimmer James Magnussen face global bans for their involvement in the drug-friendly Enhanced Games. Hawke and Magnussen are in the crosshairs of World Aquatics, which has enacted a new law giving swimming's global body power to ban anyone associated with Enhanced Games. Australia's triple Olympic medallist Magnussen was the first athlete to commit to competing at the inaugural Enhanced Games in Las Vegas in May next year. And dual Olympian Hawke has been appointed Enhanced Games' swim coach. The pair face World Aquatics bans under a fresh by-law ratified by swimming's global governing body on Wednesday. "Those who enable doped sport are not welcome at World Aquatics or our events," World Aquatics president Husain Al Musallam said in a statement. "This new by-law ensures that we can continue to protect the integrity of our competitions, the health and safety of our athletes, and the credibility of the global aquatics community." Al Musallam urged national federations, including Swimming Australia, to enact similar laws. The World Aquatics by-law is effectively a catch-all covering "any individual who supports, endorses or participates in sporting events that embrace the use of scientific advancements or other practices that may include prohibited substances and/or prohibited methods". "(They) will not be eligible to hold positions with World Aquatics or to participate in any World Aquatics competitions, events or other activities. This ineligibility would apply to roles such as athlete, coach, team official, administrator, medical support staff or government representative," it said. Any ban is unlikely to effect Magnussen, who retired from competitive swimming after the 2018 Commonwealth Games on the Gold Coast. The dual 100m freestyle world champion came out of retirement to compete at Enhanced Games, an event supporting the use of performance-enhancing drugs to feature swimming, athletics and weightlifting. But it could impact Hawke, who has been coaching in the US since 2006. Enhanced Games was officially launched last month by Australian entrepreneur Aron D'Souza, who has backing from multi-billionaires and a family company of US president Donald Trump. D'Souza will soon respond to World Aquatics' move, while Hawke forecast some backlash when at the Enhanced Games' launch in Las Vegas last month. "You'd be silly not to think that people aren't going to be opposed to it," Hawke told AAP on May 21. "But we're outside the scope of the Olympic Games and World Aquatics, we're not competing in that space. "I would never want an athlete to participate at the Olympic Games and be cheating and, unfortunately, I think that is happening in this day and age." Hawke has already started coaching Magnussen and the second athlete to sign for Enhanced Games, Greece's four-time Olympic freestyler Kristian Gkolomeev. The pair swam timed 50m freestyle races while on performance-enhancing drugs in February in the US. Gkolomeev clocked 20.89 seconds, bettering the 50m freestyle world record of 20.91 set by Brazil's Cesar Cilio when coached by Hawke in 2009, to collect $US1 million offered by Enhanced Games for anyone breaking the legal benchmark. Ukraine's 50m butterfly world record-holder Andriy Govorov and Bulgarian butterflier Josif Miladino are other confirmed athletes for Enhanced Games, with further signings to be announced. Australian coach Brett Hawke and swimmer James Magnussen face global bans for their involvement in the drug-friendly Enhanced Games. Hawke and Magnussen are in the crosshairs of World Aquatics, which has enacted a new law giving swimming's global body power to ban anyone associated with Enhanced Games. Australia's triple Olympic medallist Magnussen was the first athlete to commit to competing at the inaugural Enhanced Games in Las Vegas in May next year. And dual Olympian Hawke has been appointed Enhanced Games' swim coach. The pair face World Aquatics bans under a fresh by-law ratified by swimming's global governing body on Wednesday. "Those who enable doped sport are not welcome at World Aquatics or our events," World Aquatics president Husain Al Musallam said in a statement. "This new by-law ensures that we can continue to protect the integrity of our competitions, the health and safety of our athletes, and the credibility of the global aquatics community." Al Musallam urged national federations, including Swimming Australia, to enact similar laws. The World Aquatics by-law is effectively a catch-all covering "any individual who supports, endorses or participates in sporting events that embrace the use of scientific advancements or other practices that may include prohibited substances and/or prohibited methods". "(They) will not be eligible to hold positions with World Aquatics or to participate in any World Aquatics competitions, events or other activities. This ineligibility would apply to roles such as athlete, coach, team official, administrator, medical support staff or government representative," it said. Any ban is unlikely to effect Magnussen, who retired from competitive swimming after the 2018 Commonwealth Games on the Gold Coast. The dual 100m freestyle world champion came out of retirement to compete at Enhanced Games, an event supporting the use of performance-enhancing drugs to feature swimming, athletics and weightlifting. But it could impact Hawke, who has been coaching in the US since 2006. Enhanced Games was officially launched last month by Australian entrepreneur Aron D'Souza, who has backing from multi-billionaires and a family company of US president Donald Trump. D'Souza will soon respond to World Aquatics' move, while Hawke forecast some backlash when at the Enhanced Games' launch in Las Vegas last month. "You'd be silly not to think that people aren't going to be opposed to it," Hawke told AAP on May 21. "But we're outside the scope of the Olympic Games and World Aquatics, we're not competing in that space. "I would never want an athlete to participate at the Olympic Games and be cheating and, unfortunately, I think that is happening in this day and age." Hawke has already started coaching Magnussen and the second athlete to sign for Enhanced Games, Greece's four-time Olympic freestyler Kristian Gkolomeev. The pair swam timed 50m freestyle races while on performance-enhancing drugs in February in the US. Gkolomeev clocked 20.89 seconds, bettering the 50m freestyle world record of 20.91 set by Brazil's Cesar Cilio when coached by Hawke in 2009, to collect $US1 million offered by Enhanced Games for anyone breaking the legal benchmark. Ukraine's 50m butterfly world record-holder Andriy Govorov and Bulgarian butterflier Josif Miladino are other confirmed athletes for Enhanced Games, with further signings to be announced. Australian coach Brett Hawke and swimmer James Magnussen face global bans for their involvement in the drug-friendly Enhanced Games. Hawke and Magnussen are in the crosshairs of World Aquatics, which has enacted a new law giving swimming's global body power to ban anyone associated with Enhanced Games. Australia's triple Olympic medallist Magnussen was the first athlete to commit to competing at the inaugural Enhanced Games in Las Vegas in May next year. And dual Olympian Hawke has been appointed Enhanced Games' swim coach. The pair face World Aquatics bans under a fresh by-law ratified by swimming's global governing body on Wednesday. "Those who enable doped sport are not welcome at World Aquatics or our events," World Aquatics president Husain Al Musallam said in a statement. "This new by-law ensures that we can continue to protect the integrity of our competitions, the health and safety of our athletes, and the credibility of the global aquatics community." Al Musallam urged national federations, including Swimming Australia, to enact similar laws. The World Aquatics by-law is effectively a catch-all covering "any individual who supports, endorses or participates in sporting events that embrace the use of scientific advancements or other practices that may include prohibited substances and/or prohibited methods". "(They) will not be eligible to hold positions with World Aquatics or to participate in any World Aquatics competitions, events or other activities. This ineligibility would apply to roles such as athlete, coach, team official, administrator, medical support staff or government representative," it said. Any ban is unlikely to effect Magnussen, who retired from competitive swimming after the 2018 Commonwealth Games on the Gold Coast. The dual 100m freestyle world champion came out of retirement to compete at Enhanced Games, an event supporting the use of performance-enhancing drugs to feature swimming, athletics and weightlifting. But it could impact Hawke, who has been coaching in the US since 2006. Enhanced Games was officially launched last month by Australian entrepreneur Aron D'Souza, who has backing from multi-billionaires and a family company of US president Donald Trump. D'Souza will soon respond to World Aquatics' move, while Hawke forecast some backlash when at the Enhanced Games' launch in Las Vegas last month. "You'd be silly not to think that people aren't going to be opposed to it," Hawke told AAP on May 21. "But we're outside the scope of the Olympic Games and World Aquatics, we're not competing in that space. "I would never want an athlete to participate at the Olympic Games and be cheating and, unfortunately, I think that is happening in this day and age." Hawke has already started coaching Magnussen and the second athlete to sign for Enhanced Games, Greece's four-time Olympic freestyler Kristian Gkolomeev. The pair swam timed 50m freestyle races while on performance-enhancing drugs in February in the US. Gkolomeev clocked 20.89 seconds, bettering the 50m freestyle world record of 20.91 set by Brazil's Cesar Cilio when coached by Hawke in 2009, to collect $US1 million offered by Enhanced Games for anyone breaking the legal benchmark. Ukraine's 50m butterfly world record-holder Andriy Govorov and Bulgarian butterflier Josif Miladino are other confirmed athletes for Enhanced Games, with further signings to be announced. Australian coach Brett Hawke and swimmer James Magnussen face global bans for their involvement in the drug-friendly Enhanced Games. Hawke and Magnussen are in the crosshairs of World Aquatics, which has enacted a new law giving swimming's global body power to ban anyone associated with Enhanced Games. Australia's triple Olympic medallist Magnussen was the first athlete to commit to competing at the inaugural Enhanced Games in Las Vegas in May next year. And dual Olympian Hawke has been appointed Enhanced Games' swim coach. The pair face World Aquatics bans under a fresh by-law ratified by swimming's global governing body on Wednesday. "Those who enable doped sport are not welcome at World Aquatics or our events," World Aquatics president Husain Al Musallam said in a statement. "This new by-law ensures that we can continue to protect the integrity of our competitions, the health and safety of our athletes, and the credibility of the global aquatics community." Al Musallam urged national federations, including Swimming Australia, to enact similar laws. The World Aquatics by-law is effectively a catch-all covering "any individual who supports, endorses or participates in sporting events that embrace the use of scientific advancements or other practices that may include prohibited substances and/or prohibited methods". "(They) will not be eligible to hold positions with World Aquatics or to participate in any World Aquatics competitions, events or other activities. This ineligibility would apply to roles such as athlete, coach, team official, administrator, medical support staff or government representative," it said. Any ban is unlikely to effect Magnussen, who retired from competitive swimming after the 2018 Commonwealth Games on the Gold Coast. The dual 100m freestyle world champion came out of retirement to compete at Enhanced Games, an event supporting the use of performance-enhancing drugs to feature swimming, athletics and weightlifting. But it could impact Hawke, who has been coaching in the US since 2006. Enhanced Games was officially launched last month by Australian entrepreneur Aron D'Souza, who has backing from multi-billionaires and a family company of US president Donald Trump. D'Souza will soon respond to World Aquatics' move, while Hawke forecast some backlash when at the Enhanced Games' launch in Las Vegas last month. "You'd be silly not to think that people aren't going to be opposed to it," Hawke told AAP on May 21. "But we're outside the scope of the Olympic Games and World Aquatics, we're not competing in that space. "I would never want an athlete to participate at the Olympic Games and be cheating and, unfortunately, I think that is happening in this day and age." Hawke has already started coaching Magnussen and the second athlete to sign for Enhanced Games, Greece's four-time Olympic freestyler Kristian Gkolomeev. The pair swam timed 50m freestyle races while on performance-enhancing drugs in February in the US. Gkolomeev clocked 20.89 seconds, bettering the 50m freestyle world record of 20.91 set by Brazil's Cesar Cilio when coached by Hawke in 2009, to collect $US1 million offered by Enhanced Games for anyone breaking the legal benchmark. Ukraine's 50m butterfly world record-holder Andriy Govorov and Bulgarian butterflier Josif Miladino are other confirmed athletes for Enhanced Games, with further signings to be announced.

Australia's Enhanced Games duo face global swim bans
Australia's Enhanced Games duo face global swim bans

West Australian

time6 days ago

  • Health
  • West Australian

Australia's Enhanced Games duo face global swim bans

Australian coach Brett Hawke and swimmer James Magnussen face global bans for their involvement in the drug-friendly Enhanced Games. Hawke and Magnussen are in the crosshairs of World Aquatics, which has enacted a new law giving swimming's global body power to ban anyone associated with Enhanced Games. Australia's triple Olympic medallist Magnussen was the first athlete to commit to competing at the inaugural Enhanced Games in Las Vegas in May next year. And dual Olympian Hawke has been appointed Enhanced Games' swim coach. The pair face World Aquatics bans under a fresh by-law ratified by swimming's global governing body on Wednesday. "Those who enable doped sport are not welcome at World Aquatics or our events," World Aquatics president Husain Al Musallam said in a statement. "This new by-law ensures that we can continue to protect the integrity of our competitions, the health and safety of our athletes, and the credibility of the global aquatics community." Al Musallam urged national federations, including Swimming Australia, to enact similar laws. The World Aquatics by-law is effectively a catch-all covering "any individual who supports, endorses or participates in sporting events that embrace the use of scientific advancements or other practices that may include prohibited substances and/or prohibited methods". "(They) will not be eligible to hold positions with World Aquatics or to participate in any World Aquatics competitions, events or other activities. This ineligibility would apply to roles such as athlete, coach, team official, administrator, medical support staff or government representative," it said. Any ban is unlikely to effect Magnussen, who retired from competitive swimming after the 2018 Commonwealth Games on the Gold Coast. The dual 100m freestyle world champion came out of retirement to compete at Enhanced Games, an event supporting the use of performance-enhancing drugs to feature swimming, athletics and weightlifting. But it could impact Hawke, who has been coaching in the US since 2006. Enhanced Games was officially launched last month by Australian entrepreneur Aron D'Souza, who has backing from multi-billionaires and a family company of US president Donald Trump. D'Souza will soon respond to World Aquatics' move, while Hawke forecast some backlash when at the Enhanced Games' launch in Las Vegas last month. "You'd be silly not to think that people aren't going to be opposed to it," Hawke told AAP on May 21. "But we're outside the scope of the Olympic Games and World Aquatics, we're not competing in that space. "I would never want an athlete to participate at the Olympic Games and be cheating and, unfortunately, I think that is happening in this day and age." Hawke has already started coaching Magnussen and the second athlete to sign for Enhanced Games, Greece's four-time Olympic freestyler Kristian Gkolomeev. The pair swam timed 50m freestyle races while on performance-enhancing drugs in February in the US. Gkolomeev clocked 20.89 seconds, bettering the 50m freestyle world record of 20.91 set by Brazil's Cesar Cilio when coached by Hawke in 2009, to collect $US1 million offered by Enhanced Games for anyone breaking the legal benchmark. Ukraine's 50m butterfly world record-holder Andriy Govorov and Bulgarian butterflier Josif Miladino are other confirmed athletes for Enhanced Games, with further signings to be announced.

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