Newsletter Subject

Road to the Olympics: Modern Cheaters

From

ozy.com

Email Address

info@daily.ozy.com

Sent On

Wed, Jul 7, 2021 08:51 PM

Email Preheader Text

www.ozy.com Sponsored by Wednesday, July 07, 2021 Women’s American 5,000- and 1,500-meter recor

www.ozy.com [OZY]( Sponsored by Wednesday, July 07, 2021 Women’s American 5,000- and 1,500-meter record holder and Olympic contender [Shelby Houlihan is banned from competing for four years]( after testing positive for a steroid, and now Sha’Carri Richardson, [America’s fastest woman](, is benched for a month — and thus forced out of the Tokyo Games — for failing a drug test for marijuana. As an NCAA distance track runner and an avid fan, I was shocked by both developments. Wherever the blame lies, and however intentional or unintentional the offending acts, these cases remind us of the enduring presence of performance-enhancing and illegal substances in sports. Doping shreds public trust in athletics and in each affected sport — not just in [countries known for concocting systematic doping measures](, but right here in the United States. Even worse, offenders take money, fame and glory away from clean competitors. With the Olympics drawing near, today’s Daily Dose delves into the fight against dopers and the high-profile culprits and highlights how cutting-edge, controversial technologies are upending the sports world. Liam Jamieson, OZY Reporter duping the dopers 1. Designer Bodies CRISPR gene editing has been a controversial scientific find ever since it burst onto the scene in 2012. But what if athletes see it as the next frontier in doping? Scientists in Germany are already concerned by the possibility of athletes looking to change their DNA in the single-minded pursuit of success. “The possibility of misuse in sports cannot be ignored,” Mario Thevis of the German Sport University Cologne[tells Laboratory Equipment](. The World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) has banned CRISPR-Cas9, an enzyme, [due to its ability to change DNA](. Meanwhile, Thevis and his team have set out to thwart would-be cheaters by testing how to identify gene doping in human plasma and mice. 2. It’s All in the Pee Urine testing is far from new in the sports world, but a team of researchers at the Florida Institute of Technology have created [a new method]( to detect doping that may leave juiced athletes biting their nails as the Tokyo Games approach. The testing will help officials detect known illicit substances more efficiently by distinguishing between endogenous (occurring naturally in the body) and exogenous (coming from an outside source) steroids. What’s more, it will also help detect illicit substances made in covert laboratories that have yet to be discovered by WADA by using machine learning methods to predict the likely structure and characteristics of new, unknown drugs. 3. Dried Blood The Tokyo Games will be the first time [dried blood spot testing]( will be used in a major international sporting event, [showing promise that the new method could become commonplace](. Less intrusive for athletes, the test involves collecting a small sample of just a few blood droplets on a blotting paper, allowing officials to test for banned substances more precisely. Though the method has yet to fully replace urine and blood tests, experts hope that dried blood spot testing will grow more accurate as it is developed. 4. Retroactive Liquid Testing A total of [139 athletes]( were disqualified from the London Olympics in 2012, but here’s the catch: Only [15 were caught and disqualified]( prior to or during the actual games. More than 120 were caught thanks to [retroactive liquid testing](. Making up for the [time period]( between when a new performance enhancing substance emerges and WADA’s awareness of it, retroactive testing allows anti-doping agencies to test stored samples from the past using newer tests. Though they can’t go back in time and remove the athletes from the competition, officials hope that retroactive testing and disqualifications will deter athletes from taking illicit substances. [the future of footwear is here]( Our favorite shoes just got even better! Our friends at [Cariuma]( have made news by announcing their new shoe, made with three times less carbon than the industry average sneaker. Be a part of history by purchasing your own pair of these cool, comfy and game-changing shoes today. Made with bamboo and easy to slip right on, these will be your new favorites. OZY readers [get $15 off]( with code OZY15! [Order Now]( a porky problem 1. The Notorious Burrito Until three weeks ago, Shelby Houlihan was a shoo-in not only to make the U.S. Olympic team, but also as a prime medal contender in Tokyo. Instead she’s now [making global headlines]( for all the wrong reasons, having been issued a four-year competition ban after testing positive for the anabolic steroid nandrolone in December 2020. The 28-year-old claims she had eaten a burrito the previous night that had incidentally contained nandrolone, a substance that can be found in pig offal and a common contaminant that “makes up most of the positive tests that the [Athletics Integrity Unit]( finds,” investigative reporter David Epstein told [Slate](. 2. Pandemic Window With no races requiring in-competition testing and limits on anti-doping organizations’ testing initiatives due to local health regulations, some speculate that a pandemic-induced gap in testing may have [provided a window for athletes to dope]( with little to no risk of getting caught. In April 2019, anti-doping organizations collected over 25,000 blood and urine samples from athletes. In April 2020? [Only 578](. “If someone wants to dope, what better chance than when people can’t test you for it,” Canadian professional runner and co-host of the [Running Rivals]( podcast [Rory Linkletter]( tells OZY. Studies have shown that even one cycle of performance enhancing drugs that leaves the body relatively quickly can bring benefits to an athlete for up to four years, so athletes who were doping during the testing lull may now be testing clean while still reaping the benefits during the Olympic Games and onward. 3. Doping Déjà Vu The Houlihan episode isn’t the first time questionable meat has played a role in the doping ban of an American track athlete. In 2017, [Ajee Wilson]( tested positive for the banned substance zeranol but escaped a ban after a U.S. Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) investigation concluded it was highly likely that Wilson’s positive test was the result of contaminated meat. Similarly, long jumper [Jarrion Lawson]( last year successfully fought a four-year ban after testing positive for trenbolone contracted from contaminated beef, after providing a credit card receipt and information showing that the restaurant’s beef supplier used the steroid. 4. The Trouble With Testing Though Houlihan passed a hair follicle test indicating that she had not injected the steroid and a polygraph test saying she never knowingly took the substance, the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) panel [denied her appeal]( as she had failed to provide evidence that the burrito was the source of the nandrolone. This heightened sensitivity around doping tests has some experts concerned. “Maybe the process is broken,” Linkletter says. “That would really crush our spirits in trusting clean sport, and if that’s the case I feel horrible for Shelby.” He adds, however, “if you’re going to advocate for clean sport and someone fails a drug test, I think you have to support the results of the drug test.” 5. Hidden Xenophobia? In an [anonymous survey]( taken by 1,400 USADA-tested athletes, over half said they believe foreign competitors used the pandemic’s lull in testing as a doping opportunity, while only 30% said they suspect American athletes did so. Fueled by [Russia’s state-sponsored doping scandal]( and with [misconceptions]( of systematic doping in countries like Kenya, tones of xenophobia have emerged in Americans’ perceptions of who is doping and who isn’t. “We don’t want to believe that Americans are cheating; we want to believe that all other countries are cheating,” says Linkletter. [meet stalin’s james bond]( He was a master spy, a daredevil, a womanizer and a rule breaker. Richard Sorge served as the inspiration for Ian Fleming’s James Bond character, infiltrating the Nazis during World War II. Curious to see more? Don’t miss the chance to experience this historical documentary with the adventure of a cinematic thriller on [CuriosityStream](, the coolest new streaming platform. Best of all, for a limited time, OZY readers can spark their curiosity and [get a full year of access]( for only $1.25/month using code [OZY](. [Sign up now]( [Exciting News From OZY Studios]( OZY and Grammy-winning R&B superstar Jody Watley have signed a talent deal. An upcoming scripted feature will depict the highs and lows of the singer and songwriter's incredible life. Interested in learning more about her life? Watch her on [The Carlos Watson Show](now. [Watch Now]( caught out [1. Sha’Carri Richardson]() “I am human,” Richardson cryptically [tweeted]( on Thursday. After blowing away the women’s 100-meter field at the U.S. Olympic trials last month, the sprinter was the starting favorite for gold in Tokyo. But after [testing positive for marijuana]( and given a one-month suspension, she won’t be on the plane to Tokyo. Richardson says she consumed the substance to cope with the unexpected death of her biological mother. What’s more, she did so in Oregon, a state that has legalized recreational marijuana use. The ban has sparked a public outcry, calling into question [why the substance is still banned]( in sport, with high-profile athletes coming out in support of Richardson and a [petition]( to let her compete surpassing 550,000 signatures. 2. Salwa Eid Naser Athletes can even face suspensions without testing positive for any banned substance. How, you ask? Just weeks before the start of the Tokyo Games, 400-meter star Salwa Eid Naser found herself slapped with a [two-year ban]( for violating international anti-doping regulations. The 23-year-old Bahraini, who secured the 400-meter gold at the 2019 World Athletics Championships in Doha and stands as the country’s top women’s sprinter, was found guilty of three [whereabouts failures]( by the CAS, a move it deemed “inexcusably irresponsible.” Though her world championship win, where she clocked the third-fastest 400-meter sprint in history, will remain, all of her results since November 25, 2019, will be disqualified. Her ban will last into early 2023. 3. Christian Coleman Missing surprise drug tests is not taken lightly, which is why the world’s fastest man, American sprinter Christian Coleman, will be sitting out of the Tokyo Olympics, where he was the heavy favorite to take gold in the men’s 100-meter. Though doping officials do not suspect Coleman of using performance-enhancing drugs, the anti-doping watchdog Athletics Integrity Unit determined that Coleman had reported [three whereabouts failures]( for anti-doping tests in a 12-month period, resulting in a two-year ban, which began in May 2020. It has since been reduced by six months. tech troubles 1. Carbon-Plated Controversy Illegal substances aren’t the only sources of controversy. We first saw [carbon-plated racing shoes]( break into the running scene in 2017, when the Kenyan marathon legend Eliud Kipchoge wore Nike’s first carbon-plated model, [the Vaporfly](. What ensued was [an arms race between competing brands]( to come up with their own models. Now, the carbon plates, which help a runner retain energy, have moved from the roads to the track. “We’d be foolish to not acknowledge that they play a part in everything,” says Linkletter. Just as with marathons, track times have gotten faster across the board, and [many credit the high-tech shoes](, so much so that [rival running shoe companies]( without carbon-plated spikes have even allowed their endorsed athletes to compete in the Nikes (with the swooshes covered). [2. Light-Up Tracks]() When Ugandan Joshua Cheptegei went on his speedy tear last summer, toppling world records in both the 5,000-meter and 10,000-meter, a noticeable new feature on the track caught the world’s eye: [Wavelight technology](. While Cheptegei was running, the lights traveling around the inner rail of the track moved exactly at world record pace, clocking an even split for every lap. In the 10,000-meter race in August, the Ugandan stuck with the lights for the whole race, pushing past at the last lap to break the long-standing record by just over six seconds. Critics of Wavelight technology argue the lights provide an [unfair advantage](. 3. At Altitude This is a legal high. No one is arguing that living at high altitude is dishonest, but it does offer an advantage. A [University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center study]( explains how when endurance athletes acclimate to living and training at high altitude (a sweet spot of about 7,000 to 8,000 feet), they acquire more oxygen-carrying red blood cells, which give their muscles an extra boost of oxygen when competing at sea level. The practice has made places like [Iten, Kenya](, and [St. Moritz, Switzerland](, into destinations for endurance training. With the “live high — train low” theory, endurance athletes benefit from spending most of their day at a high altitude, then dropping down in elevation for more rigorous training sessions. 4. Suspicious Supplements World Anti-Doping Agency rules and lists of banned substances are not without gray areas. IV drips are one way that athletes get legal vitamins and supplements into their systems more directly. But WADA has set the limit at [100 milliliters every 12 hours](, violations of which have led to bans, including the one placed on U.S. swimmer [Ryan Lochte]( in 2018. “As long as the temptation is there and the stakes are so high, people are going to continue to try to find an unfair advantage,” [Robert Herbst](, a former Olympic drug-testing official, tells OZY. [TV]( | [Podcasts]( | [News]( | [FESTIVALS]( Modern Media Company OZY Media, 800 West El Camino Mountain View, California 94040 This email was sent to {EMAIL} [Manage Subscriptions]( | [Privacy Policy](

EDM Keywords (246)

yet xenophobia world women womanizer window wilson weeks watch want wada vaporfly used upending university unintentional try trouble training tracks track total tokyo time thursday think testing test temptation technology team systems support supplements success substance steroid state start stands stakes sprinter sport spirits spending speculate sparked spark sources source songwriter slapped sitting singer since signed shown shoo shocked shelby set sent see secured scene russia running role roads road risk right richardson results result restaurant researchers remove remain reduced question purchasing providing provided process predict practice possibility played play plane petition people part pandemic pair oxygen oregon one offer nikes new nazis nandrolone nails muscles much moved move month models misuse miss misconceptions method men marijuana makes make lull lows long living little lists limits limit lights let led leaves learning last issued inspiration injected history highs highlights help grow gold going given give get germany future fueled friends found footwear foolish find fight far failing failed experience escaped ensued emerged email elevation efficiently eaten easy dropping doping dopers dope doha dna distinguishing disqualified disqualifications dishonest discovered directly destinations depict day daredevil curiositystream curiosity created court country countries cope controversy continue consumed competing compete come coleman clocked cheptegei cheating cheaters characteristics change chance caught catch case cas cariuma burrito break body board benefits benched believe began banned ban bamboo awareness august athletics athletes athlete ask arguing arbitration appeal announcing americans altitude also advocate adventure advantage acquire acknowledge accurate access ability 578 2018 2017 2012 15 120

Marketing emails from ozy.com

View More
Sent On

28/02/2023

Sent On

28/02/2023

Sent On

27/02/2023

Sent On

27/02/2023

Sent On

26/02/2023

Sent On

26/02/2023

Email Content Statistics

Subscribe Now

Subject Line Length

Data shows that subject lines with 6 to 10 words generated 21 percent higher open rate.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Number of Words

The more words in the content, the more time the user will need to spend reading. Get straight to the point with catchy short phrases and interesting photos and graphics.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Number of Images

More images or large images might cause the email to load slower. Aim for a balance of words and images.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Time to Read

Longer reading time requires more attention and patience from users. Aim for short phrases and catchy keywords.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Predicted open rate

Subscribe Now

Spam Score

Spam score is determined by a large number of checks performed on the content of the email. For the best delivery results, it is advised to lower your spam score as much as possible.

Subscribe Now

Flesch reading score

Flesch reading score measures how complex a text is. The lower the score, the more difficult the text is to read. The Flesch readability score uses the average length of your sentences (measured by the number of words) and the average number of syllables per word in an equation to calculate the reading ease. Text with a very high Flesch reading ease score (about 100) is straightforward and easy to read, with short sentences and no words of more than two syllables. Usually, a reading ease score of 60-70 is considered acceptable/normal for web copy.

Subscribe Now

Technologies

What powers this email? Every email we receive is parsed to determine the sending ESP and any additional email technologies used.

Subscribe Now

Email Size (not include images)

Font Used

No. Font Name
Subscribe Now

Copyright © 2019–2024 SimilarMail.