
Swimming champ McEvoy says Enhanced Games 'record' means nothing
Kristian Gkolomeev claimed to have blitzed the 50m freestyle in 20.89 seconds in February, eclipsing the official current record time of 20.91 set in 2009 by the Brazilian Cesar Cielo.
Greece's Gkolomeev has been taking performance-enhancing drugs while training for next year's Enhanced Games and was also wearing a special swim suit that would breach Olympic standards.
"It doesn't count in any way, shape or form when you take drugs or wear one of the banned suits, or both," said McEvoy, who won 50m freestyle gold at the 2024 Paris Games.
"It's got no relevance to Olympic or world championship 50-metre comps, or to the international rankings around them."
The first edition of the Enhanced Games will be staged in Las Vegas in May 2026, with athletes participating in three sports -- athletics, swimming and weightlifting.
Athletes will be allowed to use drugs which are banned across international sport such as steroids and human growth hormones.
Anti-doping authorities on Thursday lined up to condemn the event.
WADA, the global anti-doping watchdog, called it "a dangerous and irresponsible concept".
Aron D'Souza, the Australian entrepreneur behind the event, said it was an exercise in testing the boundaries of human performance.
Winners stand to reap $250,000, and a bonus of $1 million for anyone who breaks a world record.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


France 24
2 hours ago
- France 24
Paris Olympics and Paralympics cost taxpayer nearly 6 bn euros: state body
The organisation of the two sporting extravaganzas last summer cost 2.77 billion euros, which included 1.4 billion euros for security. A further 3.19 billion euros was spent on work linked to infrastructure projects. The Olympics ran from July 26 to August 11, while the Paralympics took place from August 28 to September 8, with organisers making the most of historic sites in central Paris, either as venues or the backdrop to the events. The Games were widely hailed as highly successful. The national audit body said there would be a "heightened interest" in the figures because France is also preparing to host the 2030 Winter Olympics in the French Alps. It is the first time actual figures have been announced, although the president of the national audit body, Pierre Moscovici, had in 2024 said they would cost the state "three, maybe four, five billion euros". Moscovici, a former French finance minister and European Union Commissioner, added that the real costs would only be known at the end of the Games. Until now only the costs of the local organising committee (COJO) of 4.4 billion euros, which represented a surplus of 76 million euros, have been made public. That figure came almost exclusively from private financing and from Solideo, the body responsible for delivering Olympic construction projects, which was in part publicly financed. A more detailled report will be published in October as other costs are not yet known. The body added that because of a lack of concrete information the figures did not include "the positive and negative impact the Games had on economic activity". It said however that the Games were "indisputably a success with the public and the media".


France 24
13 hours ago
- France 24
Alonso says Rudiger complained of racist insult
Rudiger was visibly angered after an exchange of words with Pachuca's Gustavo Cabral after the final whistle and spoke to Brazilian referee Ramon Abatti Abel. Asked about the incident in the post-match press conference, Alonso said: "Toni told us something, we support Toni and we will see what happens. "I think the FIFA protocol has been activated to investigate, but if it has happened, all measures should be taken and we support Antonio because it's something unacceptable. "In football there is no tolerance for this, and if it happened, then measures should be taken. This is what Antonio has told us and we believe him. It's being investigated now," he said. Pachuca coach Jaime Lozano was also asked about the incident but said he was unaware of what had happened. "I just found out from you, you are letting me know, we did not talk about it in the dressing room, I haven't spoken to Cabral about this, I cannot give you an explanation about it because this is the first (I have heard of) this news," he said. "It cannot be justified at all but I will talk to him, I've known him for a little while and and I have never heard of something like that with Pachuca players. I cannot defend my captain at any cost but I will talk about it with him," he said.


France 24
14 hours ago
- France 24
Ten-man Real Madrid show class in Pachuca win
The result leaves Madrid, under new head coach Xabi Alonso, on top of Group H with four points while Pachuca are eliminated after two defeats. Saudi club Al Hilal, who held Real in their opener, face second-placed Salzburg later on Sunday. The Spanish giants were in trouble after just seven minutes when Raul Sencio was shown a straight red card after he pulled down Salomon Rondon with the Venezuelan clear on goal. That left the Liga MX team sensing the chance for an upset in front of 70,248 fans at the home of the NFL's Carolina Panthers. Pachuca quickly went close when Brazilian Kenedy saw a shot parried out by Thibaut Courtois and the Belgian keeper did brilliantly to deny Alan Bautista's follow up shot. But Real were able to get a grip on the game in midfield and slow the pace down, limiting opportunities for Pachuca. It was a superbly worked team goal that provided the breakthrough for Madrid in the 35th minute. Gonzalo Garcia's clever flick released Fran Garcia down the left and he looked inside to Jude Bellingham who took the ball in his stride and then buried a left-foot shot into the corner. Pachuca were not disheartened through and Courtois had to be alert again to push away a low drive from the dangerous Kenedy. But two minutes before the break Real doubled their advantage when Trent Alexander-Arnold drilled a low cross in from the right and Arda Guler collected Gonzalo's deft lay-off and fired home. Pachuca created a pile of chances after the break, peppering Courtois's goal, but the Belgian was up to the task denying Brazilian substitute John Kennedy and efforts from Rondon and Bryan Gonzalez. Javier Eduardo Lopez missed the best opportunity for the Mexican side, firing wide after some sloppy defending from Madrid. The outcome was put beyond doubt in the 70th minute when Federico Valverde slid the ball home after a smart exchange with Brahim Diaz. Pachuca finally got some reward for their determined effort when Elias Montiel's shot on the turn was deflected off Aurelien Tchouameni and flew past the wrongfooted Courtois.