Nearly one in every ten retired NFL players has admitted to using steroids or “doping” during their professional career. Numerous other competitive sports have athletes repeatedly pumping strength-building substances into their bodies from day to day. The harsh consequences and possible suspension from the game does not faze them as they continue to put themselves in danger of the deadly side effects.…
Due to the greediness of sports figures, professional athletes are not punished in the same manner as other professionals are. It is like they are in a completely different group that uses an entirely different set of morals. Team owners care more about making their money that they do about setting a good example for young kids and making professional sports fun again rather than a business. Three good examples of this greediness are Roberto Alomar, Warren Sapp, and Dennis Rodman. Team owners and their respective leagues need to do something to turn this situation around before they have murderers and rapists playing sports for millions of dollars a year.…
Athletes are sometimes prone to get into trouble because of their recognition and the great things they do in their field of play. One hypothesis looks at the athletic environment as a potential cause. See competitive athletics is a very dichotomous environment. On the one hand, you have rules, regulations, etc (Ashbrook online). These are in place to keep the playing field as even as possible, with the hopes of determining the "best" performer (Ashbrook online). On the other hand, we have money and fame, lots of it. How do athletes get money and fame? By being successful at sport. But how do we become successful at sport? Ideally, with hard work and determination. But what if there was an easier way (Ashbrook online)?…
1. The manager of Queensland Health's computer network constructed the probability distribution for the number of interruptions to the system per day using historical data:…
What is Ethics? My understanding of Ethics is that it is the difference between doing something right or doing something wrong. People make choices in life that could affect them either positively or negatively. For example, when I make the choice to go to all of my classes on Monday this would be the right thing for me to do. By paying attention, by making sure I understand the material, taking notes, raising my hand and asking questions will enable me to become better prepared. I would benefit by going to every class for the entire semester which will help me become more organized and equipped which could eventually lead to better grades and understanding. On the other hand, the wrong decision would be not to go to all of my classes. I would…
Professional athletes face many issues, especially after their athletic career is over. These issues range from financial instability and degraded health to public scrutiny. However, professional athletes face unique issues concerning criminal conduct. Some athletes receive preferential treatment due to their fame while others may receive extreme scrutiny for actions that other people frequently commit. In order to properly handle the unique issues professional athletes face, every professional sport should have a policy for criminal conduct. Policies would hold athletes accountable for their actions and prevent them from bias punishment or lack of punishment.…
For some athletes, the risk of losing or even being less than the best is worse than the many consequences of doping in professional sports, and for decades, performance enhancing drug controversies have made headlines around the world. Drug use over the years in the sporting world has become a worldwide phenomenon due to the advancement in technology which has allowed for greater research and development of performance enhancing drugs. While drugs are generally categorized as detrimental to an individual’s health and social status, many athletes still choose to embark on experimenting with the opposing concept of drug use, in that it will supposedly benefit them in one way or another. Thus it has become a matter of issue to discuss whether performance enhancing drug use in sport is for either personal success or because sport is considered to be ‘Big Business’. I believe that while many athletes willingly take performance enhancing drugs for the concept of money, fame and recognition under the heading of ‘Big Business’, they first must have a desire to win and or ‘fit in’ for the benefit of personal success.…
The ethical dilemma is to explain to Mr. Ostacolo that Sam has always had an interest in physical activity, but because he is only mobile in a wheelchair, he has been denied many opportunities to pursue such interests. Most importantly, Sam wants the community center to organize and run a wheelchair basketball league. As for the community center, they refuse to allow Sam to play and do not have any money for a wheelchair basketball league. In this case, I do believe the deontological theory works for this entire case, considering that, Sam is part of the Americans with Disabilities Act and this community center must allow him to participate, however, if they are unable to find other participants to play in the wheelchair basketball league,…
Doping has widely become known as the use of banned substances and practices by sports personnel particularly athletes in an attempt to improve sporting performances. No sensible fan of sport today denies the prevalence of drugs in virtually every major sport, yet none would argue they can ever be eliminated completely. Money alone would seem to guarantee that much. High profile athletes today are competing for high stakes, not just millions, but dozens of millions. The fear of losing everything career, opportunity, contracts, name, fame, and money is pushing more sportsmen all over the world to use performance enhancing drugs, mainly anabolic-androgenic steroids, to either gain a competitive advantage, or to simply keep pace with other athletes using performance enhancers. The primary reason why PED’s are outlawed in professional sports is that they give users a perceived unfair advantage over the rest of the field, while potentially putting their long-term health at risk if the drugs are used irresponsibly and without proper medical supervision. Various professional sports leagues have attempted to level the playing field by testing for drug use and suspending, banning, or fining those found guilty. It’s a noble effort, but is it working? Stiff punishments have done little to reduce the number of sportsmen caught doping every year. Cycling hero Lance Armstrong was recently implicated in a doping scandal that vacated his record 7 straight Tour de France titles. But as it turns out, the would be inheritors of all seven of the vacated titles have all been implicated in doping scandals themselves. Major League Baseball also hands down more and more suspensions each season to players caught using banned substances, and it’s ridiculously naive to think those players are the only ones guilty of doping. If the various governing bodies of sport really want to level the playing…
The Chicago “Black Sox” demoralized a city because of their greed for money. Money that was introduced because of the corruption that can occur due to sports gambling. The eight men that threw a World Series might be recognized for participating in one of the worst known scandals in sports, but it isn’t the only time a Major League Baseball Commissioner has had to banish a player for gambling.…
As George Orwell said, “Serious sport has nothing to do with fair play. It is bound up with hatred, jealousy, boastfulness, disregard of all rules and sadistic pleasure in witnessing violence.” In other words, sport isn’t just about game play anymore. The athletes we see in serious sport, the people who have acclaimed money and fame, usually expect better treatment from everyone else, they’re spoiled and therefore behave poorly on the basis they believe they can get away with it. This is why it is not only appropriate, but essential for sporting clubs to punish athletes for off field indiscretions, that is, behaviour that displays a lack of good judgement. Sporting clubs should show no lenience towards athletes who choose to put their sporting careers at risk by behaving in childish ways. Their contracts should result in termination, suspension or they should be fined, depending on the circumstance. Athletes who display idiotic behaviour create a financial loss for their club as well as creating a negative image for them too. And, by being in the public eye, they are setting a bad example for their fans, especially the children who look up to them.…
Two-thirds of all illegal performance-enhancing drug violations in the Olympics are seen in track and field, weightlifting, and cycling (Berkowitz & Meko, 2016). Although many athletes may be tested for illegal drugs, many who are under the influence go undetected. Performance-enhancing drugs are not easy to detect. According to the World Anti-Doping Agency, for every 100 tests performed each year the Olympics, only one or two athletes are caught (Berkowitz & Meko, 2016). The authors state, in order to test athletes using performance-enhancing drugs, you have to know which drugs you want to find. The common question whether performance-enhancement drugs work is evident in the fact that athletes continue to use. The authors state that track…
Supported by Catlin main argument drugs are designed especially for athletes to enhance performance have been produces, used, and athletes punished (Catlin 2008). This methods base on fairness principle, which is the stakeholders who have vested interest in the firm should be treated fairly. However the war against drug cheat is very hard to win there are always the unclear about testing, controlling doping in sport. But with the help of community, science, laws and the honest and truthful of athletes the war on drug will be win successfully. The challenging issues and problems arising from the war on drugs in sport may be resolved through the collaboration between sport philosophy, social science and sport law (Hemphill…
The forms and causes of deviance in sport are so diverse that no single theory can explain all of them (Blackshaw and Crabbe, 2004). What is accepted in sports as the norm may be seen as deviant in other spheres of society and what is seen as the norm in society can largely be seen as deviant in sports. Only on a racing track can you drive at speeds over 200 miles per hour at high risk of collision, outside the racing track it would be seen as a criminal offence. The social vacuum that has been created around sports is significantly proven to be different from the society we live in day by day. Deviance in sport can be argued, involves unquestioned acceptance of what is termed as the norms, when a social world accepts actions performed as routine and normal.…
The use of banned performance-enhancing drugs (PEDS) in sports is commonly referred to as doping. The word doping is probably derived from the Dutch word dop, the name of an alcoholic beverage made of grape skins used by Zulu warriors in order to enhance their prowess in battle. The term became current around the turn of the 20th century, originally referring to illegal drugging of racehorses. ‘Doping’ however is as old as competitive sport itself. Modern times - In 1904 Olympics marathon runner, Thomas Hicks, was using a mixture of brandy and strychnine and nearly died.…