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Pardoning Agassi will allow other players to cross the line

Harsha Bhogle

Posted: Oct 30, 2009 at 0356 hrs IST
      

: Andre Agassi has just added a convenient truth to an earlier, convenient lie. In an attempt to come out smelling of roses, he does far too much damage to those who look up to him, and other sportsmen, as role models. At the best of times it’s a flawed equation, this assumption that a fine sportsman is a fine person, but it exists and I fear Agassi may have given people reason to indulge in drugs. “Then comes a tidal wave of euphoria that sweeps away every negative thought in my head. I’ve never felt so alive, so hopeful, and I’ve never felt such energy”, he writes. It really doesn’t matter what you say after that because you have already glorified the “high”. A depressed young man has probably just succumbed.

Worse still, there was a lie and an attempt to pass the blame onto someone else. Finding people to goad you into taking a drug seems a fairly easy thing to do. Shane Warne’s mother stepped up and now Agassi’s assistant! And the message is that when the going gets tough, it’s okay to lie, even to transfer the blame. In all fairness, it happens everywhere but sportsmen tend to be looked up to; because they are tough in tough situations people assume that is true in private life. Agassi had an extraordinary attitude to sport, a wonderful work ethic and he was actually quite a decent role model. Hence the disappointment. Sometimes it is better to let a mistake stay buried for the larger good.

Agassi probably stopped, or maybe he didn’t, we’ll never know now. But not everyone can stop. We know what happens with athletes and weightlifters and the story of cycling is, sadly, also one of syringes and death. But a young man, or woman, looking ahead to the next race or the season or a couple of years ahead doesn’t believe it can happen to him or her. And as performances improve, the grip of the drug tightens. And so, while there are many sportsmen to admire, you tend to fall in love with sport, rather than with sportsmen, the more you follow it,. There are only as many people to admire and to despise in sport as there are among lawyers, accountants and stockbrokers.

And it is not difficult to see why. Sport is aspirational, performers on the field are feted, riches arrive at their doorstep along with other attractions and it is not difficult to yield. At most times, sport is a noble contest but it is too much to expect all its practitioners to embodify similar virtues. This is not to say there aren’t some fine young men and women out there. If anything, we need to applaud them even more because they have withstood propositions of all kinds and not wavered. There were many in cricket’s dark era at the turn of the century who chose the nobler path to affluence.

I have long been a huge admirer of Agassi on court but I do hope people do not rally to his support; like with the pathetic attempt to protect Roman Polanski. The more we pardon offenders, either through the law or through public affection, the easier we make it for someone else to cross the line. And here in India we need to take a tough stance too. Our weightlifters are now a joke around the world as indeed are the officials who looked the other way in spite of fairly obvious proof. If the game isn’t strong those that play it need not be strong and you can see that association at work in the build up to the Commonwealth Games.

Sadly, we need to create panic to get ourselves going. So whether we have a year to stage the Games, or four, it doesn’t really matter because we will do the work in the same time. If there is no commitment in building stadiums or running organisations, can we expect any commitment in producing athletes? Yes, somehow the Games will happen, just as somehow we will send a contingent to the Olympics. But to seek excellence we need to look elsewhere.

Yes, Dhoni produced a really classy century, Ishant Sharma found where he had misplaced his rhythm and pace but Agassi spoilt the week.

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  • Comments
     
i want yo become cricketer
by keval banodha on 2009-11-05 12:27:32.109029+05:30
i want to become a cricketer for my country and its my deram
Reply | Forword
Agassi
by Mandesh Gharat on 2009-11-02 13:22:53.63032+05:30
He deprived a lot of players the rightful right to their rightful right to the crown. Agassi has won many Grand Slam events, medal at the Olympics, which was not his. How can he be terms a legend. He cheated to win them. They should be taken away from him and given to the players who lost to him.
Reply | Forword
Presumption of innocence?
by Nathan on 2009-11-02 09:35:48.965158+05:30
In many civilised societies, the accused is given the presumption of innocence. There is no evidence that Shane Warne EVER took a performance enhancing drug, other than the tenuous leap that he took a diuretic so therefore he must have taken a performance enhancing drug. Diuretics are banned but they are not performance enhancing, and Warne paid for his crime anyway (unlike Asif etc). If Warne was an indian, of course his excuses would have been accepted by the majority of the indian public without question, but since he's an Australian, he must be a drug cheat. Well, provide some concrete evidence of your accusations, Tarun Y etc, or keep your mouths shut! There are Pakistani cricketers who would have been better examples than Warne for this article to use, but then bogle would have missed the chance to have another petty attack on an Australian, and he can't miss those opportunities can he?
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Andre Agassi
by J.Mahanty on 2009-11-01 15:56:38.519935+05:30
I think the chapter should be closed forthwith without any action against the legendary Tennis player, as he had made confession in good faith.At the same time let the Lawn tennis Authorities take stringent action and conduct Dope tests regularly for all Tournaments, to keep the drug users at a bay.
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funny
by Aakash on 2009-11-01 11:24:19.881198+05:30
What about you when you glorify few past Indian cricketers who indulged in match fixing ? You don't refrain from calling such cricketers by glorifying names like the god of wrist. You are a hypocrite of highest order, who don't mind presenting false shade of our cricketers till they are ready to give you interviews but it bothers you if someone took a recreational drug at some point in time. face the mirror harsha and ask yourself whether you have the guts to write such an article on cricketers who were involved in 2000 match fixing ? Would you name even a single cricketer ? No you won't bcoz you are nothing but an incredibly good talkative commentator so please stick to your only profession of always praising indian cricketers and don't try to become a opinionist.
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