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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
Sport
Aadi Nair

Enhanced games could exploit young athletes says sport medicine federation

Enhanced Games

Young athletes could be exploited if the Enhanced Games are allowed to go ahead, International Federation of Sports Medicine (FIMS) President Fabio Pigozzi said.

The Enhanced Games would allow athletes to use pharmacological or technological assistance, including substances banned by the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA).

The concept has been met with widespread criticism, with the International Olympic Committee (IOC), WADA and World Athletics having denounced the proposed competition.

Enhanced Games President Aron D’Souza has said, however, the competition would conduct rigorous health testing.

FIMS said it welcomes the decision by Enhanced Games to conduct medical screening, but warned that current technology could not ensure the safety of athletes or mitigate the health hazards of many banned substances.

In a statement published on Friday in the British Journal of Sports Medicine, Pigozzi said FIMS’s priority was to safeguard “scientific analysis, study of the physical condition of the individual, and protection of health.”

“These principles are incongruent with the current philosophy and mission of the Enhanced Games,” Pigozzi said.

“The grave concern of FIMS is that young individuals will be exploited in the quest for fame and fortune and the allure of the Enhanced Games.”

Enhanced Games President D’Souza said FIMS and the Enhanced Games shared many of the same objectives.

“The title of their article ‘We want healthy athletes and fair competition’ aligns completely with the ethos of the Enhanced Games,” D’Souza told Reuters in an email.

“The Enhanced Games is advancing healthy athletes by taking performance enhancements out of the darkness and into clinical supervision.”

In an interview with The Independent in January, D’Souza also outlined how he hoped the Enhanced Games would not only shake up the world of sport but would provide a public platform for life-extending science to thrive.

The event, which is yet to confirm a date or venue for its inaugural edition, garnered its first high-profile sign-up in February when former world champion swimmer James Magnussen announced he would come out of retirement to compete. The Australian has not competed since 2019 but said he would “juice to the gills” in an attempt to break the long-standing 50m freestyle record and claim a $1m bonus.

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