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<UID>
0009270148
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
000927
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Wednesday, September 27, 2000
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
NWS
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1A
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<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo  CHANG W. LEE/New York Times
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

C.J. Hunter, husband of track and field star Marion Jones, shed tears
as he denied using steroids at a Tuesday news conference at the Sydney
Olympics.


</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
SYDNEY OLYMPICS
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 2000, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
AMERICANS CLING TO BELIEF ONLY WE ARE ABOVE CHEATING
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
SYDNEY, Australia -- Let's get something straight, right from the start. Either you believe Olympic
athletes use drugs, or you live on Mars.

And if you believe Olympic athletes use drugs but American athletes don't --
then you also  live on Mars.

And if you believe American athletes use drugs, but when they're caught,
they'll immediately fess up to it, then you really  live on . . .

Well, you get the point.

There were so few clouds in the Sydney Olympic skies last week that we knew
some had to be coming. We just didn't know they'd take the shape of drug
tests, urinalysis and medal strippings.

But those clouds have rolled in. And so here was a petite Romanian gymnast,
just 16 years old, stripped of her gold medal because of a cold medication
tablet. Here were Bulgarian weightlifters tossed out for failed tests. Here
was a Latvian rower facing a possible ban for life. Here was a former Soviet
bloc coach caught entering the country with vials of human growth hormone --
and claiming they were for his hair loss problem.

And here, finally, in the Stars and Stripes section, was the Olympics' biggest
star-in-the-making, Marion Jones, standing in support of her husband, shot
putter C.J. Hunter, who reportedly failed four drug tests for steroids this
summer.

And the big man was crying.

"I have never in my life, nor would I ever, do anything to jeopardize my
family's opinion of me," Hunter said, breaking down Tuesday. "I don't know
what has happened and I don't know how it has happened. But I promise
everybody I'm going to find out."

Marion, his wife, gave him a kiss.

Forgive me if I don't give him a hug.

It's not that I don't feel sympathy for Hunter, the world champion shot
putter. And it's not impossible that he ingested the steroid nandrolone
without knowing it (although, as former Olympic marathoner Frank Shorter
points out, "He tested positive four different times, with four different
labs, and the same amount of the drug in his sample each time -- you be the
judge.").

It's just that I don't see Americans as holier than the rest of the world. And
I remember Canadian Ben Johnson, when first confronted with the news that he
had failed his drug test after winning the 100 meters in 1988, vehemently
denying everything. I remember him crying, and passionately claiming someone
had "poisoned" his water bottle.

Later we found out he was guilty all along.

 And I remember Irish swimmer Michelle Smith, who won a stunning three gold
medals in 1996 -- even though she'd only been a marginal swimmer before that.
I remember her crying, too, and vehemently denying charges that she used
drugs, indignantly pointing out that she passed all her tests at the Games.

Yet a few years later, we found out she was guilty, too.

So C.J. Hunter says he's innocent, says he pulled out of the Games a few weeks
ago because of injury, not because he knew these results were coming, and
whether I believe him or not is sort of besides the point.

The fact is, all of the following -- track and field's international
anti-doping chief, the head medical commissioner of the IOC, the White House
anti-drug czar, Carl Lewis, Frank Shorter and a whole host of respected
international athletic figures -- have at all at least insinuated or flat-out
accused America of covering up its drug cheats.

So what I believe and what you believe doesn't really matter when compared to
four bigger issues:

1) Does it make a difference if you knew or didn't know?

2) Does America cover up its cheats?

3) What does Marion Jones have to do with it?

4) What was Johnnie Cochran doing in the room?



Favored nation status?

Let's deal with the last one first. Cochran, the controversial lawyer of O.J.
Simpson fame, was at Jones and Hunter's news conference Tuesday, just a few
feet from the couple. He claimed he was there "as a family friend." Then
again, he's a lawyer. He'll say anything.

Here's the truth. He's there because Hunter will hire him to sue over these
allegations. And Cochran will go after everything. He'll claim the powers that
be wrongly accused his client, that the tests are flawed, that the accusations
caused Hunter emotional distress, lost income, mental anguish, you name it --
and it is precisely the fear of such lawsuits that has prompted America's
anti-doping agencies to walk on egg shells over all this stuff.

It is why we never seem to get clear information on our athletes. It is why
other nations accuse us of having "favored" status in the anti-doping world.
It is why the "dirty" bar for drugs is now so high, any reasonably intelligent
athlete could cheat and stay beneath it.

And it's the reason why, if you are a thinking person, you will put aside your
red, white and blue flag for a moment and allow yourself to be at least as
suspicious of American sports federations and their athletes as you are of
those in other countries.

 Which, in a way, brings us to point No. 3. What's Marion Jones got to do with
it?

When Hunter's failed tests came to light, the reaction from U.S. camp was best
summed up by USOC spokesman, Mike Moran. This is what he said:

"We don't want to do anything that will upset Marion's emotional support."

Excuse me? Hello? What's the higher calling of our Olympic Committee? To make
sure we're playing fair -- or to make sure Marion Jones gets to win her medals
and brings NBC high ratings and the Olympic Committee more funding?

Not to be too brutal here, but Marion Jones should have no bearing on this.
She just happens to be married to Hunter. That doesn't make her guilty of
anything (she has passed all her tests). Nor does it make her concerns an
issue.

Here is the information on her husband. 1) That he tested positive for the
steroid nandrolone not once but four times; 2) That he had amounts nearly
1,000 times the legal limit in his urine test; 3) That he pulled out of the
Olympics before these results were revealed; 4) That he says he'll now retire
from the sport. 5) That he denies doing anything wrong.

Now. I ask you something. If all the above were true, but we were talking
about a Bulgarian weightlifter how much doubt would you have about his guilt?



What's fair is fair

And speaking of Bulgarian weightlifters, let's not forget that the Games
already have expelled five athletes for failing tests, while another cluster
of athletes have disappeared on their own -- once the writing on the testing
wall became clear.

Did we mention the weightlifters who came down with a sudden case of "severe
diarrhea due to" -- and I am quoting their coach here -- "bad beef and rice"?

Did we mention the Qatar weightlifters who arrived at the Sydney airport Sept.
16, and couldn't be found for an hour? Later, a room where they had been was
found full of empty syringes, with urine on the floor. Not surprisingly, those
folks are no longer in the Games either.

And while we're at it, we must mention Andreea Raducan, the Romanian gymnast,
who won the overall gold medal, then was stripped of it after testing positive
for the stimulant pseudoephidrene -- which you'll find in many cold
medications, such as Sudafed. She had been given a cold pill by her team
physician. She didn't know. She's 16. She had a cold. She took a pill.

She lost her medal. She has been crying for two days.

Which leads us to point No. 2: does it make a difference if you knew? Not
according to the Olympic Committee. It is a no-tolerance policy. Your body is
your test paper. The urine sample is your answer. If drugs show up, how they
got there is your problem.

Is it fair? It doesn't feel so in the case of Raducan. But if she can lose the
highest honor in the Olympics over these tests, then how wrong is it to
publicize the results of Hunter's test -- when he's no longer even on the
team?

According to Hunter's news conference -- and the scurrying U.S. Olympic
officials who seem bound and determined to protect him and Marion Jones,
though not in that order -- this is all terrible, unfair, cruel.

What it is, in a word, is a mess. We have foreign officials accusing us of
covering up our drug cheats. We have people thinking Jones should somehow be
diminished by her mere marriage to Hunter. We have agencies worried about
lawsuits, and laboratories that take different times to report findings, and
supplements that athletes swallow like Sweet Tarts then blame for bad tests,
we have very respectable people like Johann Olaf Koss, the Norwegian Olympic
speed-skating hero, saying America gets favored status and Carl Lewis, the
U.S. Olympic star saying he knew of a half dozen athlete who failed drug tests
and competed with him back in the '80s.

We have fingers flying and tears falling. We have syringes at airports. We
have news conferences and emphatic statements and we have Johnnie Cochran,
who, in the end, emerges as the only in-focus image.

We know who he's looking out for.

I wish we could say the same about everybody else.



Contact MITCH ALBOM at 313-223-4581 or  albom@freepress.com. Catch "Albom in
the Afternoon" 3-6 p.m. weekdays on WJR-AM (760). And catch Mitch's Olympic TV
reports on "The Early Show," 7-9 a.m. weekdays on CBS (Channel 62 in Detroit).
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<DISCLAIMER>
THIS ELECTRONIC VERSION MAY DIFFER SLIGHTLY FROM THE PRINTED ARTICLE.
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<KEYWORDS>
SPT;OLYMPICS;C.J. HUNTER;DRUG
</KEYWORDS>
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