- Title: Enhanced Games wants to 'push the limits of humanity'
- Date: 14th February 2024
- Summary: LONDON, ENGLAND, UK (FEBRUARY 12, 2024) (REUTERS) (SOUNDBITE) (English) PRESIDENT OF ENHANCED GAMES, ARON D'SOUZA, SAYING: “University level athletes today into current Olympians you know, people who want to say you know what, I'm going to give up on the Olympic trials and just come straight to the Enhanced Games. But then there are retired athletes, like recently retired
- Embargoed: 28th February 2024 02:51
- Keywords: Aron D'Souza Enhanced Games James Magnussen Olympics doping drugs sport
- Location: VARIOUS
- City: VARIOUS
- Country: Australia
- Topics: Asia / Pacific,Sport
- Reuters ID: LVA00F005213022024RP1
- Aspect Ratio: 16:9
- Story Text: The Enhanced Games will aim to disrupt the "old, slow" Olympics by using substances banned by the World Anti-Doping Agency “to push the limits of humanity”, it’s President Aron D’Souza said.
Last week, D'Souza landed a major coup when retired world champion Australian swimmer James Magnussen agreed to take banned performance-enhancing drugs to make an attempt at breaking Cesar Cielo's 15-year-old 50 metres sprint world record for a million dollars.
The London-based Australian announced last month that he had attracted big name investors in Paypal co-founder Peter Thiel, tech investor Christian Angermayer and former Coinbase Chief Technology Officer Balaji Srinivasan.
D'Souza's vision is of a Games where athletes, competing for themselves and not their countries, are allowed to use pharmacological or technological assistance to achieve the best results they can and be richly rewarded for it.
Despite a raft of International Olympic Committee (IOC) reforms in recent years, D'Souza told Reuters the Olympics still featured too many sports that "don't really matter" and too much money was spent on constructing venues that went unused after the Games.
The Enhanced Games would start with only individual events in core sports, while team sports -- football, basketball -- would be added in later editions as the format is honed and improved.
The Enhanced Games would not be a complete doping free-for-all, however, with D'Souza stressing there would be "clinical control" of the athletes as they prepared for events to ensure safety.
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