I just read an old Sports Illustrated article from 1977 about Lasse Viren by someone named Kenny Moore. It's quite long and interesting, but written from the usual perspective of smug superiority that's almost always the case with White liberal writers. Moore writes about Finland, Finns and Viren as if they are something strange, exotic and inscrutable, from their language to their mostly introverted ways.
Viren was shy and uncomfortable with media attention. He won the gold medal in both the 5,000 and 10,000 meters in Munich in '72, and then followed that up by becoming the first man to successfully repeat in both races in Montreal in '76. This great accomplishment set off accusations by the media that Viren must have been "blood doping," something he was forced to deny over and over even though there was never any direct or indirect evidence that he was.
Certainly there's nothing remotely close to evidence presented in this lengthy SI article from '77, even though the topic is brought up time and again throughout it. This is the summary of the blood doping accusations from the article: "In Moscow in 1980 Lasse Viren will run yet again and may well win twice more. But the circumstances of Viren's career and character -- his many poor races in non-Olympic competition, his carefully kept privacy, his mildly sarcastic way with curious reporters -- have evoked a storm of accusations. It is said that his medals were won with the help of 'blood doping,' a misleading term for an experimental technique whereby some of an athlete's blood is withdrawn and the oxygen-carrying hemoglobin extracted and stored. . ."
Other than "his many poor races in non-Olympic competition," the rest of it is completely irrelevant. So he is very private and has a mildly sarcastic way with reporters -- oh the horror of it, he must be a cheater of some kind!!
Do any of you veterans who have been following track a long time have any input on Viren and the blood doping accusations that hounded him? It comes across to me as the typical smear job of a successful White athlete, being accused of cheating because he's so dominant while over the years so many black sprinters and runners, and others like Serena Williams and Tiger Woods and various boxers, quite possibly seemed to be cheaters of various kinds to put it mildly yet always got a pass and still do.
Viren was shy and uncomfortable with media attention. He won the gold medal in both the 5,000 and 10,000 meters in Munich in '72, and then followed that up by becoming the first man to successfully repeat in both races in Montreal in '76. This great accomplishment set off accusations by the media that Viren must have been "blood doping," something he was forced to deny over and over even though there was never any direct or indirect evidence that he was.
Certainly there's nothing remotely close to evidence presented in this lengthy SI article from '77, even though the topic is brought up time and again throughout it. This is the summary of the blood doping accusations from the article: "In Moscow in 1980 Lasse Viren will run yet again and may well win twice more. But the circumstances of Viren's career and character -- his many poor races in non-Olympic competition, his carefully kept privacy, his mildly sarcastic way with curious reporters -- have evoked a storm of accusations. It is said that his medals were won with the help of 'blood doping,' a misleading term for an experimental technique whereby some of an athlete's blood is withdrawn and the oxygen-carrying hemoglobin extracted and stored. . ."
Other than "his many poor races in non-Olympic competition," the rest of it is completely irrelevant. So he is very private and has a mildly sarcastic way with reporters -- oh the horror of it, he must be a cheater of some kind!!
Do any of you veterans who have been following track a long time have any input on Viren and the blood doping accusations that hounded him? It comes across to me as the typical smear job of a successful White athlete, being accused of cheating because he's so dominant while over the years so many black sprinters and runners, and others like Serena Williams and Tiger Woods and various boxers, quite possibly seemed to be cheaters of various kinds to put it mildly yet always got a pass and still do.