bell-cot 4 hours ago

The sports cheating & corruption scandals never end, do they?

Might that be a principal reason for the popularity of American "Professional" Wrestling? There's little need to cheat when the matches and outcomes are obviously scripted.

  • beart 3 hours ago

    There has always been cheating. I suspect we've just gotten better at detecting it.

    • bell-cot 2 hours ago

      Has detection gotten better, or is it merely the scandals of yesteryear fading from memory?

      "Say it ain't so, Joe."

DeepSeaTortoise 2 hours ago

Just how much extra performance could you gain by altering a suit in a way that was not detectable without taking the suit apart?

The article mentions a 5% surface area increase potentially offering benefits, but that's A LOT and if the suits had been altered in that way, surely someone would have noticed?

Also someone took a "secret" video of the suits being altered?

I'm sorry, but this doesn't pass my smell test. I don't doubt the suits having been alerted, but I highly doubt this having been done or ordered by the athletes who used those suits. And neither any of the team members, acting in favor of these athletes.

.

Winning gold is nice, leaving an auditable trail behind, almost certainly causing them to be stripped of their achievements, career, reputation, livelihood and opportunity to pursue their hobbies for an uncertain minimal gain, isn't.

  • metalman an hour ago

    it is very very clear, that the atheletes were custom fitted into the altered squirl suits, and trained specificaly and extensivly in there optimal use. traditional ski jumps were done with the legs fully closed, with a last second switch to a landing posture.... attempts to salvage "reputations" are extra cringy. Time for the boys to step up, fess up, scuff there feet, say they are sorry, take there lumps, and then do there damdest to win fair and square, next time. The label reads "amature sports" and any plausible adherance to that, would outright ban anything, that was not built for use by amatures in full compliance with thr rules, flat out prohibit any corporate, or thinktank or fancy university "assistance", including the consumption of anything other than food, with full disclosure of all, substances injected, prescribed, injested. We do have the complete technical ability to quickly, and cheaply ,do a total forensic examination of every athletic competitor, and eliminate cheating. Sport, like science, is digging it's own grave, with "reputational management"

    • DeepSeaTortoise 39 minutes ago

      ?

      > it is very very clear, that the atheletes were custom fitted into the altered squirl suits

      Aren't the suits tested for compliance on the athlete?

      > trained specificaly and extensivly in there optimal use. traditional ski jumps were done with the legs fully closed, with a last second switch to a landing posture

      I honestly don't see this.

      I've looked at quite a few videos now, comparing the techniques between other jumpers and their medal winning jump.

      It looks close enough to me and, honestly, plenty of experts, too, otherwise they would have pointed to the difference in techniques enabled by the altered suits, rather than only having to rely on finding alterations after taking the suit apart.