Why Shane Ryan is the first Irish athlete to sign up for Enhanced Games

The Olympic swimmer can now take all the performance-enhancing drugs he wants as part of his training plan

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Irish Olympian and record-breaking swimmer Shane Ryan. Photograph: Inpho/Ryan Byrne
Irish Olympian and record-breaking swimmer Shane Ryan. Photograph: Inpho/Ryan Byrne

Irish Olympic swimmer Shane Ryan can now take all the performance-enhancing drugs he wants as part of his training plan.

And if anabolic steroids, human growth hormone (HGH), or testosterone supplements show up in his system next May when he competes in Las Vegas, the organisers will congratulate him for playing by the rules.

The Enhanced Games – dubbed the Steroid Olympics – was dreamed up by Australian businessman Aron D’Souza as a sporting event that lets competitors maximise their performance by doping.

The first Enhanced Games will feature three athletics events (100m, 100m/110m hurdles, and a “sprint showcase”), five swimming events (including the 50m and 100m freestyle) and two weightlifting events.

Ryan, who was the first swimmer to compete in three Olympics for Ireland, says the decision to join the Enhanced Games is financial. He will, he says, be “making over six figures for nine months and then potentially making over $600,000 when it comes down the line”.

But Wada (World Anti-Doping Agency) rules exist not just to level the playing field for all athletes but also to protect them from the health impacts of doping. So isn’t the 31 year-old worried?

Irish Times sports writer Malachy Clerkin talked to him from his new training base in Nevada.

Presented by Bernice Harrison. Produced by Suzanne Brennan.

Bernice Harrison

Bernice Harrison

Bernice Harrison is an Irish Times journalist and cohost of In the News podcast

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