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Ethics in Sports is the Subject of Various Reports

May 27th, 2008 • Posted in: News

Baseball team owners and players follow up on Mitchell report; adoption of anti-doping convention urged before start of Olympics; study urges professional tennis to clean up problems with gambling

VARIOUS DATELINES
Substance abuse and gambling allegations were the underlying moral issues in several sports stories last week. Among them:

  • Major League Baseball owners and players have ratified a policy that will provide amnesty for those named in a report on abuse of performance-enhancing drugs. But UPI reports that the agreement also increases the allowed number of drug tests per year in baseball to an average of three per player. The policies are a result of the document known as the Mitchell Report, a sweeping probe that led to hearings on Capitol Hill about allegations of abuse of steroids and other substances.
  • U.S. lawmakers urged Congress to ratify the UNESCO International Convention Against Doping in Sports before the start of the Beijing Olympics in August, according to a report from the Agence France-Presse. Eighty-five countries have signed on to the convention, but so far the United States has not, primarily because the measure is still tied up in committee hearings. Delaware Sen. Joe Biden was among those urging the Senate Foreign Relations Committee to expedite the measure.
  • Professional tennis must implement anticorruption programs, an independent panel commissioned by the sport’s governing bodies recommended last week. The four-month review cited several threats to the integrity of tennis, including corrupt practices instigated by gambling and the leaking of inside information relevant to the results of upcoming matches, according to a Press Association report. The review was set in motion following a series of high-profile incidents involving allegations of match-fixing, notes the report.

Sources: UPI, May 23 — AFP, May 23 — Press Association, May 20.

For more information, see: Related Newsline story, Feb. 18 — Related Newsline story, Jan.14 — Related Newsline story, Dec. 17 — Related Newsline Commentary, Dec. 17, 2007.

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