Nick Symmonds, American 800m runner, calls track a 'filthy, dirty sport'
Outspoken middle-distance runner lets criticism fly
Outspoken middle-distance runner Nick Symmonds tricks himself into believing that doping isn't going on in his event. Otherwise, he couldn't climb out of bed every morning to train.
"I stick my head in the sand and pretend it's not happening," the American 800-meter standout said in a phone interview. "It's a filthy, dirty sport — the cheaters are always going to be two steps ahead of the testers. It's never a level playing field.
"Anyone who stands on the starting line at an Olympic final and thinks they're racing against a clean field is delusional."
Symmonds doesn't shy away from voicing his opinion on track's inequities or from keeping pressure on those responsible for making decisions in a sport that's engulfed by doping scandals with the Olympics in Rio de Janeiro rapidly approaching.
'Track needs a total re-haul'
He boycotted the world track and field championships in Beijing last summer to make a point about the relationship between athletes, sponsors and national bodies. Soon, he's headed to court as he takes on USA Track and Field, along with the United States Olympic Committee, over the type of sponsors that can be displayed on uniforms and other clothing at the Olympic Trials in July.
"Track needs a total re-haul," he said. "It's broken beyond repair at the moment."
Symmonds didn't compete two weeks ago at the world indoor championships in Portland, Ore. — he stopped racing indoors — but appreciated track's governing body excluding the Russians over doping charges. The IAAF could decide in late May or early June if Russia's track and field program has done enough to repair its anti-doping measures and can be reinstated for the Rio Games.
"Now that they're trying to catch them, I feel better," said Symmonds, a two-time Olympian who lives in Seattle and is currently squeezing in some high-altitude workouts in Albuquerque, New Mexico, as he recovers from a torn left calf. "But it's still a long, long way from cleaning up the sport."
Sebastian Coe, the president of track's governing body, has a simple message for clean athletes: Help the IAAF catch the cheaters.
"These days have got to be over, where clean athletes sit there and say, 'There's no system,"' Coe said. "Don't sit there with a vow of silence and then [speak up] when that athlete tests positive, because you could've actually sped up this process for us."
Keeping his thoughts to himself has never been an issue with Symmonds.
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—@NickSymmonds
If the IOC shared 50% of its 4 billion 2016 revenue with the athletes it would write a $190,000 check to every single Rio Olympian. <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Rio2016?src=hash">#Rio2016</a>
—@NickSymmonds
Last summer after making the world team, Symmonds took a hardline stance over what he called a restrictive, unclear policy written by USATF regarding exactly when American athletes are required to wear team-sponsored Nike gear while in Beijing. Symmonds is sponsored by a rival shoe company, Brooks, and wanted it clearly spelled out what constitutes a team function.
With no resolution, he stayed home for the world championships. He watched the 800-metre final and felt he could have won a medal.
"But I haven't regretted it for two seconds," said the 32-year-old Symmonds, who dedicated his silver medal at the 2013 world championships in Moscow to his gay and lesbian friends as a show of support amid Russia's anti-gay legislation.
Now, Symmonds and a company he co-founded, Run Gum, are in the middle of a lawsuit with USATF and the USOC, attempting to break a monopoly by certain sponsors. In part, the suit states: "USATF, the USOC, and their co-conspirators cannot curtail competition by picking and choosing eligible market participants and excluding the rest."
The USATF had no comment on the lawsuit. The USOC filed a motion to dismiss the case, which will be heard in about two weeks.