NEW YORK, April 9, 2009 - With the 2009 professional baseball season now in full swing, fans across America are still debating their feelings about favorite players who have (or might have) used steroids or other performance enhancing drugs. These substances - and whether their use in sports is illegal, immoral, or unfair - was the topic of a timely discussion and debate at The Ninth Annual Cal Ramsey Distinguished Lecture Series, hosted by NYU's Preston Robert Tisch Center of Hospitality, Tourism, and Sports Management.
The event was moderated by Arthur Miller, NYU University Professor and NYU-SCPS director of public dialogues, with panelists including former president of the Texas Rangers Michael Cramer, now clinical assistant professor, NYU Tisch Center; World Anti-Doping Agency sub-committee chair Dr. Gary Wadler, clinical associate professor, NYU Medical School; NYU's President, John Sexton; former GM of the Montreal Expos and Boston Red Sox, Dan Duquette; and a host of former athletes, sports commentators, and legal scholars.
The discussion, lively and argumentative at times, was spurred on by Miller in the "Socratic dialogue" style he popularized on PBS's Fred Friendly seminar series. To no one's surprise, a final consensus was never reached on the question of performance-enhancing drugs in sports and how it should be regulated. Some memorable sound bites included:
"The General Manager is not Father Flanagan, and this isn't Boys Town," said Duquette. "In professional sports, the General Manager is paid to put the best ball club he can on the field… if you don’t have a testing program that has some teeth in it, with some penalties, you really don't have anything in terms of legislating fairness on the field. You can’t tell who’s using and who’s not using."
"My view is that the risks for an athlete to using supplements is much greater compared to what could be gained," said Dr. Wadler. "Stay away from them because you’re running the risk of a positive drug test… There's no question that most of the tests that I have talked about from around the world, under the World Anti-doping agency, in those last few years were related to dietary supplements…reclassified as steroids…same chemical."
Hosted by the NYU Tisch Center at NYU's School of Continuing and Professional Studies (www.scps.nyu.edu), the Performance-Enhancing Drugs and Sports: Illegal, Immoral, Unfair? panel took place on February 25, 2009. Video from the panel is available in its entirety at http://www.scps.nyu.edu/cal-ramsey.
NYU-SCPS Cal Ramsey Panel: The Issue of Steroids in Sports Still a Question
Video Is Now Available On NYU-SCPS Website
About the NYU School of Continuing and Professional Studies
Established in 1934, NYU-SCPS (scps.nyu.edu) is one of NYU’s several degree-granting schools and colleges, each with a unique academic profile. The reputation of NYU-SCPS arises from its place as the NYU home for study and applied research related to key knowledge-based industries where the New York region leads globally. This is manifest in the School’s diverse graduate, undergraduate, and continuing education programs in fields such as Real Estate and Construction Management; Hospitality, Tourism, and Sports Management; Global Affairs; Philanthropy and Fundraising; Graphic Communications Media, Publishing, and Digital Arts; Human Capital Management, Marketing, and Public Relations; with complementary strengths in the Liberal and Allied Arts; Translation and Interpreting; Management and Information Technology; and Finance and Taxation. More than 100 distinguished full-time faculty members collaborate with an exceptional cadre of practitioner/adjunct faculty and lecturers to create vibrant professional and academic networks that attract nearly 5,000 degree-seeking students from around the globe. In addition, the School fulfills the recurrent continuing higher education needs of local and professional communities, as evidenced by 55,000 annual enrollments in individual courses, specialized certificate programs, conferences, workshops, seminars, and public events. The School’s community is enriched by more than 25,000 degree-holding alumni worldwide, many of whom serve as mentors, guest speakers, and advisory board members.
