The competitive cycling world is being shaken as riders during competitions have be discovered using mechanical assists to help them perform better. From the AP:
“Caught using a hidden motor at a world championship race, cyclo-cross rider Femke Van Den Driessche of Belgium has been banned from cycling for six years.The sanction imposed Tuesday by the International Cycling Union is a first using its rules on technological fraud.
This case is a major victory for the UCI and all those fans, riders and teams who want to be assured that we will keep this form of cheating out of our sport,” UCI president Brian Cookson said in a statement.
The UCI banned Van Den Driessche through Oct. 10, 2021, stripped her of the Under-23 European title she won last November and fined her 20,000 Swiss francs ($20,500).The 19-year-old rider had said she would skip her disciplinary hearing at the UCI’s Swiss offices and retire from racing.”
Isn’t technology grand? We have miniaturized engine components enough to fit into a skinny bike frame and at the same time have improved battery performance enough to make this sort of cheating worthwhile. In the video below, see how it works and possibly see it in action on during professional racing.
I’m not a fan of bike racing or anything but what I find interesting is what the ‘competitive spirit’ can do to people and their moral/ethical character when it comes to high reward activities.
Competition should bring about the best of us, whether it is competing against a time or someone else in an endeavour. I see nothing wrong with this concept as being committed to a goal and focusing time and energy on it is how many things are accomplished in the world. However when the stakes are too high, and too fraught with competition, then unethical activities can be realized.
“There may be no Olympic sport as dependent on technology as cycling, whose space-age, feather-light carbon fiber bikes can cost more than a car and make the difference between a gold medal and nothing.
That has also made the sport ripe for an entirely new kind of doping: mechanical.
It has long been rumored that riders were finding ways to hide tiny electrical motors in their frames, or were using magnets in their wheels, to produce a couple of extra watts of power. But it was not until a young cyclocross racer was discovered to have a motor hidden in her bike frame last year that it became a prominent issue.”
Can we think of cheating as a indicator of when a sport has become too competitive?
The Cycling Union is taking this threat to the legitimacy of the sport seriously as they are using MRI scanners for the Olympics to ferret out the mechanical dopers.
“The group will work with the International Olympic Committee to test bikes in Rio; both will use proprietary software that the governing body developed for iPads. The system essentially scans a bike for magnetic fields that could indicate the presence of motors, and it is advanced enough to distinguish between illegal technology and the electronic shifting systems that have become common among elite riders.”
It seems that there is a limit to the usefulness of competitiveness as a motivator to many human endeavours as once a critical moral threshold has been breached, the allure of cheating becomes too strong. Thus the legitimacy of the sport, built on competition, is undone by that very same factor.
Similar analogs can be seen in the world of business and trading. The market works fairly well until rampant greed ruins the party for everyone. I smell a sociology paper flitting about on this topic as to how the limiting aspects of cheating interact with competitive sports and other activities.




9 comments
July 6, 2016 at 9:22 am
makagutu
Maybe doping or cheating should be formalised
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July 6, 2016 at 10:55 am
Sha'Tara
I like makagutu’s comment: give prizes for those who do the most cheating and drugging – just like the politicians get from their lobbyists, corporate sponsors and owners. Why should commercial sports be any less corrupt than the rest of the world’s organizations? Organized sports is blatant corruption anyway, why can’t the participants be as corrupts as their handlers and owners? I personally despise all organized sports and have realized years ago that competition is one of the great evils of mankind. This situation only proves that I made the right choice 40 years ago to turn off the TV and disconnect it from the grid. I watch movies on it.
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July 6, 2016 at 12:43 pm
The Arbourist
@Sha’Tara
Rather cynical view of sports. I mean, shouldn’t sports be about humans competing on a fair level?
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July 6, 2016 at 5:34 pm
Francois Tremblay
I agree with your entry, The Arbourist, but I don’t think competition is “fair,” at least not in the sense that we talk about fairness in other areas. It is not “fair” that women are not as good as men in sports that rely on physical attributes that men have more of in average (as opposed to sports where women dominate because they have a physical advantage in it, like shooting, ski jumping, swimming, gymnastics, etc, in short all the sports men don’t give a shit about). It is not “fair” that people who have the leisure time or money to train more and better get to be more successful. It is not “fair” that a strong competitor, who might be a champion, may be overshadowed by someone who’s even better at the time. Competition, by its very nature, cannot be “fair.” Only cooperation can be fair (but it is not necessarily so, either).
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July 6, 2016 at 6:44 pm
Sha'Tara
That was mild, actually. Cynical does describe to a point how I feel about commercialized sports. On competition, that’s always a form of war: who can physically or mentally best another. I was taught long ago that organized sports are what people do when they can’t have a war going on. Why would anyone need to compete against another? How much difference to the world in general have successful sports figures made? Why are they paid so much money, or get special recognition? We need less competition and more compassion.
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July 8, 2016 at 1:05 pm
The Arbourist
@Sha’Tara
It, like religion, is an opiate of the people. People are crazy about sports – could you imagine if they were that fanatical about becoming involved in politics, or civic culture?
Our societies have been build on cooperation and compassion, it is the capitalist ethic that pits us against each other.
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July 8, 2016 at 1:08 pm
The Arbourist
@ Francois Tremblay
I suppose not, but in sports, we seem to at least give the appearance of fairness, so that skillful behaviour is rewarded. People who practice a skill and become competent should be rewarded for their hardwork.
Here’s the thing though, if I could take a drug that would make me a better piano player without all the practice, I would in a second. To be able to play the grand music…
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July 8, 2016 at 3:49 pm
Francois Tremblay
The appearance of fairness? Sure. We love appearances.
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July 10, 2016 at 6:02 am
roughseasinthemed
I doubt Wales, who got to the European football semis were cheating.
I doubt Sean Kelly, Irish successful cyclist, who we met and cycled with a few years ago was cheating when he won competitions in Europe.
The cheaters are in the minority in sport. Our worry is in banking and politics where the cheaters are in the majority. Pretty much what Francois said.
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