When Rituals Fail: Confessions of Doping in Elite Sports
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Nineteenth-Century Influences
Charles Finney was one of the most influential evangelical preachers of his time, and he developed a set of what he called “new measures” for revivals. One of these was the anxious bench; others included holding revivals over a series of days, encouraging women to speak openly at these meetings, and eliciting fervor through preaching. For Finney, all sins were voluntary, meaning they stemmed from the will of the sinner, and because of this, all sinners had the ability to reshape their wills and cease sinful ways. He saw the anxious bench as a tool to accomplish this. His most famous invocation of the anxious bench was in Rochester, New York in 1830–1831. Over the course of six months in Rochester, Finney preached 98 sermons and boasted over 1200 conversions. In part because of his claims to numerical success, other revivalists adopted his “new measures”, and features like emotional public confession became common across New England (Perciaccante 2003).“The bench was the climactic site in the revival process, setting sinners physically apart from the audience as symbols of sin, and of their own failure to make a break with their sinful past: they were separated by their failures, and by their failure to cease their failures”.
Roosevelt’s words indicate a socio-economic aspect to muscular Christianity. As non-Protestant immigration from Europe and the migration of black Americans from the rural South to the urban North changed the demographics of American cities, Protestant reformers worked hard to establish belief in manly, moral virtue that could be achieved and experienced through sport.“Nowadays, whatever other faults the son of rich parents may tend to develop, he is at least forced by the opinion of all his associates of his own age to bear himself well in manly exercises and to develop his body—and therefore, to a certain extent, his character—in the rough sports which call for pluck, endurance, and physical address”.(quoted in Putney 2001, p. 106)
The question of whether sport builds character remains unanswered, but American culture still tends to adopt the muscular Christian perspective that sport participation is inherently good and moral. One of the major challenges to this perspective on sport is the prevalence of doping.3“The mere fact that people do or do not play sports tells us little about their overall lives and how they go about developing their sense of who they are, how they are connected to others, and what is important in their lives. This is why hundreds of studies have not given us the evidence we need to determine whether sports do or do not build character”.
3. History of Doping
4. Accusations
4.1. The Tour de France
4.2. Major League Baseball
Inspired by the attention McGwire and Sosa garnered, as well as the common locker room knowledge that steroids played a part in their success, other players jumped on the steroid train, including Barry Bonds, who showed up to spring training in 1999 with an extra 15 pounds of muscle, unheard of for an athlete in his mid-30s. Though some journalists harbored suspicions that Bonds’s larger physique was the result of steroids, the example of the nearly banned and reviled Steve Wilstein dissuaded them from investigating Bonds’s drug use (Fainaru-Wada and Williams 2006, p. 72). That season, Bonds blew out his elbow because he had gained muscle too quickly and overtaxed his tendons. It could have been a career-ending injury, but he was back playing seven weeks later. The media bought the story that the injury was the result of a long baseball career, and steroids went unmentioned.“Looking back, I think the country had been in the grip of a collective delusion. People were wondering, foolishly, how the game had become so damn big, and they looked everywhere for explanations… The ballparks were smaller, they said. The strike zone was smaller. The bats were better and more powerful… The entire analysis was laughable. The answer was clear and any fool could sum it up in one word. The word was steroids”.(Canseco 2008, pp. 86–87, emphasis in original)
When the president invoked the term “character”, this was a direct reference to muscular Christianity’s premise that sport holds moral value and that athletes benefit morally from playing sports. Clear also is the assumption that athletes have a moral obligation to serve as role models.“Athletics play such an important role in our society, but unfortunately, some in professional sports are not setting much of an example. The use of performance-enhancing drugs like steroids in baseball, football and other sports is dangerous and it sends the wrong message: that there are shortcuts to accomplishment and that performance is more important than character. So tonight, I call on team owners, union representatives, coaches and players to take the lead, to send the right signal, to get tough and to get rid of steroids now”.
5. Confessions
5.1. Major League Baseball
When Mark McGwire delivered his famous line of the hearings, “I’m not here to discuss the past”, it was clear that he did not intend to follow the ritual of confession. This was even more apparent when McGwire invoked Fifth Amendment protections. According to Canseco:“Fairly or not, the afternoon centered on McGwire. Had he chosen to admit to steroid use, he might have been remembered as the heroic figure he hoped to be. He might have been seen as Representative [Tom] Davis saw him: “As a decent guy who got caught up in something everyone else was doing”.But … All [America] saw was a former baseball hero who refused to talk about a past that was quickly unraveling … And when North Carolina Republican Patrick T. McHenry asked him whether he thought using steroids was cheating, McGwire tried to sum up all the ambiguity he felt, and all the ambiguity he hoped America felt.“That’s not up to me to determine”, he said simply”.
By avoiding the ritual of the anxious bench, McGwire and the others who testified that day could not achieve the benefit of forgiveness. Though the hearing was choreographed in a Finney-esque style, the testifying athletes resisted the paradigm, side-stepping accusations and failing to reveal any inner torment over their actions.“I thought that was a huge mistake. In my opinion, anyone who takes the Fifth is already guilty. And I guess, for once, the sports media agreed with me. For the next few days, everyone’s favorite line was “I’m not here to talk about the past”. And it was always delivered with a smirk”.
Barry Bonds’s critique of the game itself and its the unrealistic expectations on athletes’ bodies shows that he believed steroids were necessary to do his job.“Man, it’s not like this is the Olympics. We don’t train for four years for, like, a ten second [event]. We go 162 games. You’ve got to come back day after day. We’re entertainers. If I can’t go out there [to play], and somebody pays $60 for a ticket, and I’m not in the lineup, who’s getting cheated? Not me”.(Quoted in Fainaru-Wada and Williams 2006, p. 268)
The “sin” of statistics tampering by using steroids struck Corzine as unforgivable. This is partly due to the status of baseball as America’s national pastime, and partly due to the tendency of baseball fans to compare players across seasons and generations. For these kinds of fans, performance enhancing drugs spoiled previous records in ways that advancing technologies did not (Parry 2017).“We can always reinvent (and maybe even forgive) gamblers like Shoeless Joe Jackson or Pete Rose, but there is less room to rehabilitate Mark McGwire or Barry Bonds because their sins were greater. Their transgressions struck at the very soul of the “Last Pure Place” [a literary metaphor for baseball]; they waged war on the numbers, the holy scriptures of the church of baseball, the sacred links tying each passing generation to the next”.
5.2. Lance Armstrong
Perhaps because of these adamant denials, it was quite surprising when Armstrong announced two months later that he would accept the USADA findings against him, charges that resulted in disqualification of his seven Tour victories and a lifetime ban. Two months later, Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI), the governing body of cycling, accepted the USADA report and implemented Armstrong’s disqualification.“These charges are baseless, motivated by spite and advanced through testimony bought and paid for by the promises of anonymity and immunity. Although USADA alleges a wide-ranging conspiracy extended over more than sixteen years, I am the only athlete it has chosen to charge. USADA’s malice, its methods, its star-chamber practices, and its decision of punish first and adjudicate later are all at odds with our ideals of fairness and fair play”.(Quoted in Walsh 2013, p. 388)
For these authors, Armstrong dodged important parts of the confession ritual; admitting to sin, shame, and personal torment.“To repent of a “sin”, the accused must actually see the behavior as sinful. Had he publicly acknowledged that his actions had in fact constituted cheating, the apology would likely be perceived as more authentic, rather than continuing the denials that he had made for more than thirteen years”.
Armstrong’s choice to have Winfrey as his interviewer set the audience up to expect an anxious bench style confession: An admission of sin and torment leading to a declaration of how one will do better in the future. This is not what Armstrong delivered, and might explain why those who watched the interview thought that he came across as pompous, arrogant, and unapologetic (Thomsen and Anderson 2015, p. 93).4“Whether victim or perpetrator, audience or actor, the occupant of Winfrey’s anxious center is there for a reason: to instruct themselves. At the center of her ritual process is the awareness that all of us, no matter our cultural or criminal position, have some sin from which we must, and shall, be released”.
6. Conclusions
Of course, the implied answer to Canseco’s questions is: No, it’s not really cheating. For players like Canseco who take this point of view, there is no inner torment or sin to confess, so rituals based on the anxious bench are unnecessary and embarrassing.“Is it cheating to do what everyone wants you to do? Are players the only ones to blame for steroids when Donald Fehr and the other bosses of the Major League Players’ Association fought for years to make sure players wouldn’t be tested for steroids? Is it all that secret when the owners of the game put out the word that they want home runs and excitement, making sure that everyone from trainers to managers to clubhouse attendants understands that whatever it is the players are doing to become superhuman, they sure ought to keep it up?”.
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
- Assael, Shaun. 2007. Steroid Nation: Juiced Home Run Totals, Anti-Aging Miracles, and a Hercules in Every High School: The Secret History of America’s True Drug Addiction. New York: ESPN Books. [Google Scholar]
- Baker, William J. 1996. Introduction. In Basketball: Its Origin and Development. Edited by James Naismith. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. [Google Scholar]
- Ballester, Pierre, and David Walsh. 2004. L.A. Confidentiel: Les Secrets de Lance Armstrong. France: La Martiniè. [Google Scholar]
- Blazer, Annie. 2015. Playing for God: Evangelical Women and the Unintended Consequences of Sports Ministry. New York: NYU Press. [Google Scholar]
- Brennen, Bonnie, and Rick Brown. 2016. Persecuting Alex Rodriguez. Journalism Studies 17: 21–38. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Breton, David Le. 2020. Sensing the World. New York: Taylor and Francis. [Google Scholar]
- Bryant, Howard. 2005. Juicing the Game: Drugs, Power, and the Fight for the Soul of Major League Baseball. New York: Viking. [Google Scholar]
- Bundgaard, Axel. 2005. Muscle and Manliness: The Rise of Sport in American Boarding Schools. Syracuse: Syracuse University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Bush, George W. 2004. Text of President Bush’s 2004 State of the Union Address. Washington Post. Available online: https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/politics/transcripts/bushtext_012004.html (accessed on 12 November 2020).
- Canseco, Jose. 2005. Juiced: Wild Times, Rampant ‘Roids, Smash Hits, and How Baseball Got Big. New York: Harper Collins. [Google Scholar]
- Canseco, Jose. 2008. Vindicated: Big Names, Big Liars, and the Battle to Save Baseball. New York: Simon and Schuster. [Google Scholar]
- Coakley, Jay. 2001. Sport in Society: Issues and Controversies, 7th ed. Boston: McGraw Hill. [Google Scholar]
- Corzine, Nathan Michael. 2016. Team Chemistry: The History of Drugs and Alcohol in Major League Baseball. Urbana: University of Illinois Press. [Google Scholar]
- Dimeo, Paul. 2007. A History of Drug Use in Sport 1876–1976. New York: Routledge. [Google Scholar]
- Dimeo, Paul, and Verner Møller. 2018. The Anti-Doping Crisis in Sport: Causes, Consequences, Solutions. New York: Routledge. [Google Scholar]
- Douglas, Delia D. 2014. Forget me... not: Marion Jones and the politics of punishment. Journal of Sport & Social Issues 38: 3–22. [Google Scholar]
- Fainaru-Wada, Mark, and Lance Williams. 2006. Game of Shadows: Barry Bonds, BALCO, and the Steroids Scandal That Rocked Professional Sports. New York: Gotham Books. [Google Scholar]
- Fotheringham, Alasdair. 2016. End of the Road: The Festina Affair and the Tour that Almost Wrecked Cycling. New York: Bloomsbury Sport. [Google Scholar]
- Guardian Staff. 2013. Lance Armstrong Comes Face to Face with Whistleblower Emma O’Reilly. The Guardian. Available online: https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2013/nov/18/lance-armstrong-whistleblower-emma-oreilly (accessed on 12 November 2020).
- Henne, Kathryn. 2015. Testing for Athlete Citizenship: Regulating Doping and Sex in Sport. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Hoffman, Shirl. 2010. Good Game: Christianity and the Culture of Sports. Waco: Baylor University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Lofton, Kathryn. 2008. Public Confessions: Oprah Winfrey’s American Religious History. Women & Performance A Journal of Feminist Theory 18: 51–69. [Google Scholar]
- Lofton, Kathryn. 2011. Oprah: The Gospel of an Icon. Berkeley: University of California Press. [Google Scholar]
- Meyer, Neil. 2011. Falling for the Lord: Shame, Revivalism, and the Origins of the Second Great Awakening. Early American Studies 9: 142–66. [Google Scholar]
- Meyer, Andrew. 2019. Redemption of ‘Fallen’ Hero-Athletes: Lance Armstrong, Isaiah, and Doing Good while Being Bad. Religions 10: 486. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Møller, Verner. 2004. The Anti-Doping Campaign. In Doping and Public Policy. Edited by John Hoberman and Verner Møller. Odense: University Press of Southern Denmark. [Google Scholar]
- Møller, Verner. 2010. The Ethics of Doping and Anti-Doping: Redeeming the Soul of Sport? New York: Routledge. [Google Scholar]
- Mottram, David R. 2011. A Historical Perspective of Doping and Anti-doping in Sport. In Drugs in Sport, 5th ed. Edited by David R. Mottram. New York: Routledge. [Google Scholar]
- Murray, Thomas H. 2018. Good Sport: Why Our Games Matter—And How Doping Undermines Them. New York: Oxford University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Parry, John Weston. 2017. The Athlete’s Dilemma: Sacrificing Health for Wealth and Fame. New York: Rowman and Littlefield. [Google Scholar]
- Perciaccante, Marianne. 2003. Calling down Fire: Charles Grandison Finney and Revivalism in Jefferson County, New York, 1800–1840. New York: SUNY Press. [Google Scholar]
- Putney, Clifford. 2001. Muscular Christianity: Manhood and Sports in Protestant America, 1880–1920. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Rosen, Daniel M. 2008. Dope: A History of Performance Enhancement in Sports from the Nineteenth Century to Today. Westport: Praeger. [Google Scholar]
- . Shafer, Michael. 2015. Well Played: A Christian Theology of Sport and the Ethics of Doping. Cambridge: The Lutterworth Press. [Google Scholar]
- Smalley, Joe. 1981. More Than a Game. San Bernardino: Here’s Life Press. [Google Scholar]
- Stephan, Scott. 2008. Redeeming the Southern Family: Evangelical Women and Domestic Devotion in the Antebellum South. Athens: University of Georgia Press. [Google Scholar]
- Thomsen, Steven R., and Harper Anderson. 2015. Using the Rhetoric of Atonement to Analyze Lance Armstrong’s Failed Attempt at Redeeming His Public Image. Journal of Sports Media 10: 79–99. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Trothen, Tracy. 2019. Making Us Better? Spirituality and Enhancing Athletes. In Spiritualities, Ethics, and Implications of Human Enhancement and Artificial Intelligence. Edited by Ray Kurzweil, Tracy Trothen and Christopher Hrynkow. Wilmington: Vernon Press. [Google Scholar]
- USADA. 2020. Choose USADA: Why Clean Sport Matters. Available online: https://www.usada.org/choose-usada/choose-usada-why-clean-sport-matters/ (accessed on 12 November 2020).
- Walsh, David. 2013. Seven Deadly Sins: My Pursuit of Lance Armstrong. New York: Atria Books. [Google Scholar]
1 | David Walsh was a reporter who followed Armstrong’s career for years and was one of the first to raise suspicions about his performance enhancement strategies (Ballester and Walsh 2004; Walsh 2013). |
2 | There are a variety of theoretical approaches that may lead to different interpretations of these events. For example, applying anthropology of the body may reveal the ways that sensory information informs our assessments of confession (Breton 2020). Applying critical race theory may reveal cultural expectations that vary based on the race of athletes, fans, and media reporters (Douglas 2014; Brennen and Brown 2016). Attending to sex and gender would show that female athletes often experience higher levels of scrutiny regarding steroid use than their male counterparts (Henne 2015). While these are beyond the scope of the current article, these facets also deserve scholarly attention. |
3 | Christian ethicists like Tracy Trothen have argued that debates over performance enhancement would shift if the values of sport were reprioritized to reflect spiritual growth and hope rather than winning (Trothen 2019). This is part of a longer trajectory of Christian rethinking of the values of sport in light of ethical challenges (Blazer 2015). |
4 | This pattern continued in Armstrong’s subsequent apologies. He met with his team’s soigneur and whistle-blower, Emma O’Reilly, through an interaction organized by the Daily Mail. Armstrong had previously dismissed her accusations as stemming from alcoholism, a claim he later admitted was false. In O’Reilly’s description of his in-person apology, she said, “I was thinking, he never actually used the word sorry. But I wasn’t looking for an insincere apology” (quoted in Guardian Staff 2013). |
Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. |
© 2020 by the author. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Blazer, A. When Rituals Fail: Confessions of Doping in Elite Sports. Religions 2020, 11, 605. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel11110605
Blazer A. When Rituals Fail: Confessions of Doping in Elite Sports. Religions. 2020; 11(11):605. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel11110605
Chicago/Turabian StyleBlazer, Annie. 2020. "When Rituals Fail: Confessions of Doping in Elite Sports" Religions 11, no. 11: 605. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel11110605
APA StyleBlazer, A. (2020). When Rituals Fail: Confessions of Doping in Elite Sports. Religions, 11(11), 605. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel11110605