Olympic great Perkins warns doping-allowed Enhanced Games are 'borderline criminal' | Maqvi News

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MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — Olympic great and Australian Sports Commission chief Kieren Perkins says “someone will die” if a multi-sport event that he called “borderline criminal” and which allows banned performance-enhancing substances goes ahead.

The Enhanced Games have been proposed by Australian entrepreneur and London-based Aron D’Souza, with Australia’s dual world champion swimmer and triple Olympic medalist James Magnussen the first athlete to publicly pledge to compete at the 2025 event.

D’Souza has promised the retired Magnussen $1 million if he can break the world 50-meter freestyle record after taking performance-enhancing substances.


FILE - Australian silver medal winner for the men's 1500m freestyle Kieren Perkins stands on the podium Saturday, Sept. 23, 2000, at the Sydney International Aquatic Center during the Summer Olympics in Sydney. Two-time Olympic swimming gold medalist and Australian Sports Commission chief Kieren Perkins says “someone will die” if a multi-sport event that he called “borderline criminal” and which allows banned substances goes ahead.(AP Photo/David Longstreath, File)
FILE – Australian silver medal winner for the men’s 1500m freestyle Kieren Perkins stands on the podium Saturday, Sept. 23, 2000, at the Sydney International Aquatic Center during the Summer Olympics in Sydney. Two-time Olympic swimming gold medalist and Australian Sports Commission chief Kieren Perkins says “someone will die” if a multi-sport event that he called “borderline criminal” and which allows banned substances goes ahead.(AP Photo/David Longstreath, File)

“Someone will die if we allow that sort of environment to continue to foster and flourish,” Perkins, who won 1,500-meter freestyle gold medals at the 1992 and ’96 Olympics and took silver in 2000, told a sports conference on Tuesday.

While not commenting directly on Magnussen, Perkins said sport shouldn’t turn its back on athletes contemplating taking part, and they should be “protected from making poor decisions.”

“I certainly fear for them, and it’s disappointing because of the selfishness that’s involved,” he said. “There’s plenty of historical examples of athletes that don’t survive through their 40s because of taking drugs, whose children are severely disabled, malformed and have had short lives themselves.”

Perkins, a three-time Olympian who broke 11 world records and earned the nickname “Superfish” in the 1990s, said questions should be asked about the commercial objectives of the organizers and pharmaceutical companies involved.