Fans worldwide lose trust in pro athletes
The series of events began with the murder-suicide of pro wrestler Chris Benoit. That tragedy revealed a very dark side in the world of professional sports that is unprecedented in pro sports history.
![]() Mary J. Russell Sports Blogger |
Among major sports leagues, only the NHL has been untainted by scandal this summer.
And just yesterday, the cycling world, which has been fighting a doping scandal for years, was rocked when the Tour de France race leader was suspended by his own team for policy violations. Danish cycling star Michael Rasmussen was booted for failing to inform his team of his whereabouts so that banned substance testing could take place. Earlier in the week, a German racer was kicked off the tour along with his entire team, after testing positive for an illegal blood transfusion.
Fans’ confidence in the integrity of professional sports and its competitors has been completely shaken, not only in the U.S., but worldwide.
After the latest Tour de France fiasco, a French poll conducted by Journal du Dimanche revealed that 76 percent of respondents doubted that any Tour de France winner did so without doping. In fact, respondents indicated doubt that any race stage winners were clean.
It appears this year’s Tour de France winner will pedal his victory lap around the Champs Elyses with a “Winner by Default” banner draped on his back.
Back in the U.S., the commissioners of the three major sports leagues face the challenge of restoring fans’ confidence in their product. Is it merely a case of removing the leagues’ bad apples, or are these scandals indicative of a more widespread, inherent problem?
Though no one ever claimed its sport’s legitimacy, it‘s disturbing nonetheless that the very gruesome history of World Wrestling Entertainment has been exposed by the Chris Benoit tragedy. A long and very decisive pattern of premature death among pro wrestlers, relating to steroid and other drug abuse, was revealed.
In baseball, there is little warmth in the celebration for Barry Bonds, who is a swing away from breaking Henry Aaron’s home run record. Because of Bonds’ steroid scandal and the possibility that his record could be tainted, the greatness of his achievement will be overshadowed. The Bonds saga continues to hang unsettled and inconclusive. Commissioner Bud Selig will be present when Bonds breaks the record, sending mixed messages to fans. Major League Baseball has both condemned and supported Bonds: What are fans to conclude?
In the NBA, Commissioner David Stern said that referee Tim Donaghy’s case is the worst situation that he has faced in his professional career. Donaghy is the NBA ref being investigated by the FBI for betting on games, including games that he was officiating. Donaghy reported to Florida police over the weekend that he had received threatening phone calls, and the Manatee County Sherrif’s office dispatched police units to Donaghy’s home in Bradenton, Fla. Meanwhile, Donaghy may have been working in cahoots with organized crime in New York City, who offered him a way out of his personal gambling debts this way: By possibly helping to fix games by making calls that would affect the point spread.
Finally, NFL quarterback Michael Vick was formally arraigned on Thursday with three other men in connection with a dog fighting operation which took place in Richmond, VA. The indictment contains charges that Vick and his accomplices routinely and in the most inhumane way, executed dogs (injured or deemed unfit to fight) by hanging, electrocution, shooting, and other forms of abuse.
The conduct of professional athletes in these cases has been suspect at best, savage and unconscionable at their worst. Big-money pro athletes, like Vick and Bonds, know what they’re signing up for when they agree to their multi-million dollar contracts. Like it or not, they represent their leagues, their teams and their communities. They are expected to do so with a standard of integrity that the NFL, MLB and NBA commissioners must now work to restore.
