Enhanced Games sprint results disappoint in Las Vegas showcase
The Las Vegas staging of the Enhanced Games delivered far less than its build-up promised, according to the sports commentary, despite a format that allowed competitors in track and field, swimming and weightlifting to use performance-enhancing drugs.
The event was promoted as a major showcase, but the commentator said its results did not match the hype. Across the meet, the only record highlighted was one from swimming, while the 100-metre races were presented as the clearest evidence that the project had fallen short.
In the men’s 100 metres, American sprinter Fred Curley won in 9.97 seconds. None of the other athletes in that final went below 10 seconds, a result the commentary framed as underwhelming for an event built around enhanced performance.
The women’s 100 metres drew even sharper criticism. Barbadian sprinter Tristan Evelyn was listed as the winner in 11.25 seconds, with the following times given as 11.4 and 11.6. The commentator argued that Class Two girls at Champs would have been competitive against those marks.
The central point of the commentary was that drugs alone do not create elite sporting achievement. The segment concluded that speed and records still depend on genuine athletic talent, not simply on access to performance-enhancing substances.
Syndicated from Television Jamaica (Video) · originally published .
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