The real doping outrage: American hypocrisy and the U.S. double standard

The real doping outrage: American hypocrisy and the U.S. double standard

EUGENE, Oregon — For the past five years, Kenya’s Lawrence Cherono has been one of the world’s top marathoners.

In 2019, he won the Boston Marathon. Again: the Boston Marathon. Is there anything more symbolic of American distance running than Boston, and #BostonStrong? That’s not a rhetorical question. Answer: no. That year, Cherono won the Chicago Marathon, too.

In 2021, Cherono finished fourth in the Tokyo Olympic marathon. Last December, he won the marathon in Valencia, Spain. This past April, he finished second in Boston. His personal best, 2:03:04, is the eighth-fastest of all time.

So where is the outrage, especially from all those, especially in the United States, who went all but berserk this past February over the Russians at the Beijing Winter Games, now that the 33-year-od Cherono has been provisionally suspended for the exact same substance that then-15-year-old Russian skater Kamila Valieva got tagged for — and under eerily similar circumstances?

Script writer's dream for U.S. track: Fred Kerley, yessir, leads 1-2-3 USA sweep in men's 100

Script writer's dream for U.S. track: Fred Kerley, yessir, leads 1-2-3 USA sweep in men's 100

EUGENE, Oregon — Fred Kerley has an active Twitter account. In it, he explains why he’s very good at running fast.

I love what I do, he says. That’s why, he goes on, I’m confident in everything I do.

To know Kerley is to understand, indeed appreciate, that he is not obnoxiously confident. He is from small-town central Texas, and he has an understated humility. “Track and field has changed my life, coming from where I come from,” he said late Saturday. “Every day I get to run track, it’s a blessing.” All the same, no one gets to be best at the 100 meters, the most alpha of alpha male disciplines, without considerable self-esteem. In that Twitter account, in which he lets the public in, at least a little, into bits and pieces of the real him, Kerley returns time and again to the notion that greatness, by implication, his, cannot be denied.

Underway at Spaceship Hayward, and ... oh, we're in Eugene

Underway at Spaceship Hayward, and ... oh, we're in Eugene

EUGENE, Oregon — The first world track and field championships to take place in the United States got underway Friday at Spaceship Hayward Field with three distinct threads. The question is which of the three will be the most memorable, will have the longest-lasting effect, when this show comes to its end in 10 days.

One, the weather is great (not baking at 110 Fahrenheit, like it was at the U.S. Trials last summer) but, as the kids would say, and all Olympic sports but especially track and field are trying to reach young people in the language they speak, Eugene does not have, not even remotely, BDE. Surprise! Not. Eugene is a remote college town and thus unsuitable for an event of this level. Bluntly, and as the world is now discovering, perhaps to its considerable dismay, it is Nowheresville, USA.

Two, athletes from a lot of different countries are having trouble getting to Eugene. To be precise, getting into the United States. Surprise! Not. This is the result of a variety of different factors. Then, when they get here, they’re housed in crummy college dorms. While the American team is in a hotel. All of this will resonate badly, and for a long time, elsewhere around the around. Guaranteed.

Three, the athletic performances surely will be world-class. What will the attendance figures be? Much more critically, the TV numbers? World Athletics and USA Track & Field are seeking to use this meet as a springboard to revive interest in the sport across the United States with an eye toward the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics. Will it? Can it?

Four case studies: athlete mental health

Four case studies: athlete mental health

Athlete mental health is a real thing. To be clear, no one is suggesting otherwise.

It’s intriguing to explore the intersection in recent days of four separate episodes that bear on this fascinating topic.

Any therapist will tell you that matters of mental health are subjective. That is, they’re in the headspace of the person who’s dealing with them. All the same, that person — for purposes of this discussion, an athlete, and more specifically, a professional athlete — lives and works among us. That means there’s some significant measure of objective if not common-sense reality.

The 800 free, and how good can best-ever Katie Ledecky be? Still trying to be better

BUDAPEST — Sports is perhaps the last refuge of unscripted reality shows, so it would be rude and disrespectful to declare that Katie Ledecky had the women’s 800 freestyle won before the beep went off Friday night here at the 19th FINA world championships.

But, you know, come on.

If we’re being honest, a legit contender for the best show in sports is to see how good Katie Ledecky can be. Still. Ten years after she burst onto the scene, winning the 800 free as a 15-year-old at the London Games in 2012.

“I made it a goal to not be a one-hit-wonder, and here we are,” she said.

Halfway through Budapest 2022: Dressel goes home and other murmurs

Halfway through Budapest 2022: Dressel goes home and other murmurs

BUDAPEST — As Yogi Berra once famously said, it ain’t over til it’s over, and while the swimming part of these 19th FINA championships is just now half over, and for a great chunk of the world these championships perhaps have an are-they-really-happening vibe, up close there are threads that clearly deserve pulling:

— Caeleb Dressel, the top American guy, went home abruptly. USA Swimming wouldn’t say what’s wrong, citing medical privacy laws.

Let’s deconstruct.

Count to 14. One Mississippi, two ... that's how much Katie Ledecky won by

Count to 14. One Mississippi, two ... that's how much Katie Ledecky won by

BUDAPEST — Some cars go from zero to 60 really fast. Not a 1975 AMC Pacer. It requires a touch over 14 seconds.

Got the picture in your mind of that wide-as-it-as-long, weirdo-bubble-glass, frog-like thing belching, lumbering, wheezing toward 60? Take out your cellphone, go to the stopwatch function, click start and watch it go tick, tick, tick. And keep on ticking. One Mississippi, two …

Fourteen-plus is a lot of seconds. Usain Bolt is already in the midst of a second 100-meter dash.

In the women’s 1500 freestyle at these 2022 FINA world championships, 14-plus is how much time winner Katie Ledecky put between her and runner-up Katie Grimes, a 16-year-old from Las Vegas.

Hey, Tilly — Katie won … again!

Hey, Tilly — Katie won … again!

BUDAPEST — If you need to read about golfers yelling at each other or journalists yelling at golfers or something like that, please click elsewhere.

Katie Ledecky was back racing Saturday night, which means we can all feel good about, well, everything. Especially about the notion of endless possibilities. And what it means to genuinely be an inspiration seemingly everywhere in our fractious and chaotic world, and especially to women and girls — some of whom make posters for you and still others who make posters and then grow up to, you know, race you.

Sarah Hirshland is USOPC chief executive. A guessing game: for how long?

Sarah Hirshland is USOPC chief executive. A guessing game: for how long?

Senior leadership at the International Olympic Committee neither likes nor respects Sarah Hirshland, the chief executive of the United States Olympic & Paralympic Committee.

She has little support among some number of key executives who head the 50 national governing bodies here in the United States.

She makes a big show of supporting U.S. Olympic athletes but late last week fired, and unceremoniously, Rick Adams, the one person at the USOPC who knew the most about getting athletes to perform their best at the Olympic Games, Winter and Summer.

A popular behind-the-scenes guessing game: how much longer will Hirshland remain chief executive?

How much longer should she?