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Enhanced Games swimmer ‘breaks world record’

Enhanced Games swimmer ‘breaks world record’

Enhanced Games
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One of its athletes broke a long-standing world record, according to the Enhanced Games, a contentious new event that promotes banned performance-enhancing drugs.

Greece’s Kristian Gkolomeev, who was 20.89 seconds faster than Brazil’s Cesar Cielo in the 2009 world record, was reportedly 20.89 seconds faster in a 50-meter freestyle time trial in the US in February.

Gkolomeev, who finished fifth at the 2024 Olympics in 21.59, began taking banned substances after signing up for the Enhanced Games in January.

The Enhanced Games held its inaugural event from May 21 to May 24 in Las Vegas on Wednesday, at a glittery launch in the city.

It has been criticised for endangering athletes ‘ health and undermining fair play.

The world can now see what is possible, it says.

For his ‘ world record ‘ in North Carolina, USA, 31-year-old Gkolomeev was wearing a full-length polyurethane ‘ supersuit’, which was banned from competition by swimming authorities a few weeks after Cielo set the world record in one.

However, Gkolomeev swam 21.03 in textile “jammer” shorts in another attempt in April that were in line with current World Aquatic rules.

That time is faster than anyone else who has never used “supersuits,” surpassing the mark set by American nine-time Olympic champion Caeleb Dressel.

The Enhanced Games say the two times are legitimate, with Gkolomeev’s swims recorded using the same timing equipment deployed at the Olympics, staged at a certified pool which has hosted the past four US Open events, and overseen by experienced officials.

World Aquatics won’t accept any of the marks.

The world’s largest swimming organization stated in a statement that “the Enhanced Games are not a sporting competition built on universal values like honesty, fairness, and equity: they are a circus built on shortcuts.”

“The enduring power of athletes to serve as role models for children and adults alike relies on their talent, hard work, respect and friendship. That’s what we’ll continue to highlight in our champions and competitions.

“The Enhanced Games gave me the resources and the team to unlock a new level of performance – and now the whole world can see what’s possible”, said Gkolomeev, whose previous 50m freestyle best was 21.44, winning silver behind Britain’s Ben Proud at the European Championships in Edinburgh in 2018.

He added that his body type significantly altered after two weeks of doping before breaking Cielo’s record in February and then moving more quickly than Dressel in textile shorts in April.

He continued, “On the second attempt, I was on a two-month cycle.”

“I had an extra 10lbs of lean muscle – we did a pretty good job with my coach in that short amount of time to get used by my new strength and weight in the water. It came out very well.

According to the Enhanced Games, he did not disclose the substances he had consumed, citing personal privacy concerns and the possibility that others would abide by Gkolomeev’s rule. It said they were prescribed “medically and legally”.

According to organizers, participants are only permitted to use “medically prescribable and legally approved” substances while being watched clinically, and they are confident that they will follow US drug enforcement regulations.

Andrii Govorov, a 33-year-old world record holder in the 50 meters, and Josif Miladinov, a 21-year-old silver medalist in the 100 meters, both from Ukraine, have signed.

Govorov announced his retirement from Olympic sport this week.

He wrote on Instagram, “This choice wasn’t easy.

I spent a lot of time reflecting, putting everything on the scale, “. Competing in Los Angeles]in 2028] was my dream. However, “life had other plans.”

After critics argued that the Enhanced Games would struggle to persuade well-known names, who were still in their prime, to cross the line, Gkolomeev, Govorov, and Miladinov’s hiring is a coup for the organization.

Australian former world champion James Magnussen, 34, came out of retirement to join the Enhanced Games in 2024, but his attempt to beat the 50m freestyle world record fell well short, recording a best time of 22.73.

A 100-strong roster of participants for the upcoming Enhanced Games event is a goal for The Enhanced Games.

At Resorts World in Las Vegas, construction crews will construct a four-lane 50-meter pool, a six-lane sprint track, and a weightlifting facility.

Many people never get back to normal, according to the saying.

Senior anti-doping and sports administration officials have harshly criticized the Enhanced Games.

Travis Tygart, chief executive of the US Anti-Doping Agency, called it a “clown show” and the World Anti-Doping Agency described it as a “dangerous and irresponsible project”.

Executive director of World Aquatics, Brent J. Nowicki, described it as “a farce, and an extremely dangerous one,” praising those involved in the sport for life.

The UK Anti-Doping (Ukad) CEO, Jane Rumble, told BBC Sport, “We are really, really concerned by this concept.

” It flies in the face of everything Ukad stands for and it flies in the face of fair play.

“Any sporting event that promotes performance-enhancing drugs is ultimately dangerous and unhealthy for athletes.” Their well-being is not at stake.

” There are also much broader societal implications. Steroid use has been well documented to cause domestic violence and adversity in the nighttime economy.

According to a Ukad survey released this week, 85% of UK teenagers support outlawing athletes who use prohibited substances.

Rumble said Ukad is unaware of any British athletes being approached by the Enhanced Games, but is planning for the possibility.

She said, “We have clearly thought through that scenario.”

According to Jim McVeigh, professor of substance use and related behaviors at Manchester Metropolitan University, organisers’ promises about athletes’ safety were “informed or purposefully misleading.”

They are concentrating on power sports like swimming, lifting, and sprinting, and athletes will use anabolic agents for those activities, he told BBC Sport.

” Athletes won’t use just in the weeks before. These people will be training right away if the investment is $1 million. Organisers are they looking out for them? Have they started their supervision?

As a group of steroid users who started out in the 1990s reached a certain age, we have really improved our understanding of the long-term effects of steroid abuse in the last ten years.

The impact on the brain has a significant impact, despite the fact that there are effects on the cardiovascular system. Many people will never return to normal hormonal production and function.

“We are aware that people in the Enhanced Games are taking high doses because they are aware that everyone else is doing so.”

Officials from Enhanced Games claim that their event will be safer than traditional sport because they can use performance-enhancing drugs openly and under the guidance of doctors.

They point to a study of the 2011 World Athletics Championships where athletes ‘ responses to an anonymised survey suggested almost 44% had taken a banned substance in the previous year.

Kristian Gkolomeev, who is he?

Kristian Gkolomeev on the podium with a medal Getty Images

In 1993, Gkolomeev was born in Velingrad, Bulgaria.

At the 1980 and 1988 Olympics in Seoul, his father, Tzvetan Golomeev, represented Bulgaria.

Gkolomeev’s mother died of medical complications shortly after his birth, and the family moved to Greece when he was young.

He won junior swimming titles at the age of five, won junior gold medals at the international and international levels, and competed in London 2012 as a teenager, placing him 31st fastest in the 100-meter freestyle.

Former British Olympic athletes Dennis Pursley and Jonty Skinner recruited Gkolomeev to the University of Alabama where he studied human performance and exercise science in addition to swimming after the Games.

He won two collegiate titles before beginning his professional career.

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  • Swimming

Source: BBC

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