Write your search in the input below and press enter.
Esc to close.

The Sports Doc Chalk Talk with Dr. Chris Stankovich

Peak Performance:
Not Just for Sports, for Life

  • Products
    • Toolkits
    • Audio
    • Videos
    • Books
    • Apps
  • Services
  • Chalk Talk
    • Recent
    • Athletes
    • Coaching
    • Sports Parenting
    • Sports Administrators
    • Life
    • Administrators
  • About Dr. Stankovich
  • Testimonials
  • Contact
  • Products
    • Toolkits
    • Audio
    • Books
    • Videos
    • Apps
  • Services
  • Chalk Talk
  • About Dr. Stankovich
  • Testimonials
  • Contact

Hello. Sign In

My Account
  • Login
  • Register
0
The Sports Doc Chalk Talk
Subscribe
The Sports Doc Chalk Talk with Dr. Chris Stankovich
  • Recent
  • Athletes
  • Coaching
  • Sports Parenting
  • Life
  • Administrators
Home / Blog / The Steroid Olympics Are Here—and Somehow This Isn’t Satire

The Steroid Olympics Are Here—and Somehow This Isn’t Satire

By: Dr. Chris Stankovich | @DrStankovich | May 21, 2026

No Comments

The “Enhanced Games,” colloquially known as the All-Drug Olympics, are about to begin this Sunday.  Yes, you heard that correctly, unlike all major drug-free professional and amateur sport leagues, the Enhanced Games not only permit illegal performance enhancement drug usage, but encourage it.  Ironically, Saturday Night Live did a skit in 1988 about the “All Drug Olympics” as a joke, never thinking we could actually devolve into a sport competition fueled by illegal dangerous drugs.  But here we are in 2026, dismissing all concerns related to safety, integrity, and role modelling for kids — something I doubt the writers at SNL could have ever seen coming:

Safety concerns

While there is certainly room to discuss and debate the grey areas of sport performance drugs and substances and what sport leagues will tolerate, to create sport competition where anything goes is a dangerous slippery slope, and a terrible precedent to set.  When competitive athletes have no rules, parameters, or consequences, many will fall prey to the emotions associated with being the best, and some will make irrational and unhealthy decisions as a result.  In fact, an argument can be made that legitimate sport leagues who do enforce drug policies actually save some athletes from themselves.  The competitive spirit for high performance athletes can leave them vulnerable to experimenting with their training (including drug usage), but those temptations are mitigated when leagues hold athletes accountable with strict guidelines, and serious consequences for cheating.  The Enhanced Games don’t seem to care about any of this, leaving their athletes in potentially dangerous spots (even if they don’t realize it).

Integrity?

Aside from the obvious safety concerns, how important are sports records that occurred because of steroids?  If you look at some of America’s biggest steroid cheaters (i.e. Barry Bonds, Lance Armstrong), their records are tainted, and most fans write them off as unscrupulous people.  If you win an event at the Enhanced Games, or break a record, should anyone actually care?  Does it matter at all?  And what message does this send to kids?  That if you only get so far with natural abilities, cheat!!!  While there is no doubt that some athletes do cheat and look for ways to work around drug policies, governing bodies need to remain vigilant and preserve integrity, not go the other way and incentivize drug usage.  After all, how impressed are you by artificially fueled performances?

Final thoughts

Admittedly, I never thought there would be a sport competition where using illegal, dangerous drugs would be not only tolerated, but encouraged.  In fact, as a lifelong SNL fan, I thought there would be a better chance of me seeing John Belushi eating little chocolate donuts in the Olympics long before the Enhanced Games — if you haven’t seen this skit before, enjoy!

athletes, cheating, steroids

  • Author
  • Comments
  • Details
Get to Know the Author

Dr. Chris Stankovich

Dr. Stankovich has written/co-written five books, including Positive Transitions for Student Athletes, The ParentsPlaybook, Mind of Steel.

Latest Blog Posts

  • May 20, 2026 Caught in the Performance Loop: Helping Athletes Handle Pressure and Expectations
  • May 18, 2026 Mind Reader or Master Manipulator? The Psychology Behind Mentalism
  • May 13, 2026 Why Action Beats Anxiety: The Mental Power of “Just Do It”
  • May 12, 2026 Going Viral at Any Cost: The Mental Health Impact of Chasing Attention
  • May 5, 2026 The Illusion of Elite Sports: Are We Watering Down Youth Competition?

Comments are closed.

PREVIOUS POST

Caught in the Performance Loop: Helping Athletes Handle Pressure and Expectations

NEXT POST

Category

Uncategorized

Tags

athletes, cheating, steroids

  • Recent Posts
  • Most Read
  • The Steroid Olympics Are Here—and Somehow This Isn’t Satire
  • Caught in the Performance Loop: Helping Athletes Handle Pressure and Expectations
  • Mind Reader or Master Manipulator? The Psychology Behind Mentalism
  • Why Action Beats Anxiety: The Mental Power of “Just Do It”
  • Going Viral at Any Cost: The Mental Health Impact of Chasing Attention
  • The Importance of Passion & Purpose for Sport Success
  • How Human Arousal Impacts Sport Performance
  • Bouncing Back: How Coaches Can Help Kids Learn from a Tough Loss
  • Learn Sports Fear Reduction with these 5 Psychology Tips
  • Why Does Your Kid Play Great in Practice, but Not in Games?
  • The Sports Doc on TV

    Catch Dr. Stankovich’s tv, radio, and print interviews and columns here!

    Dr. Chris Stankovich Watch Videos
  • Sport Performance Assessment

    Dr. Chris Stankovich Quickly and accurately test your level of mental toughness in just a few minutes using the Sport Performance Assessment.

    (SPA), an easy-to-use sport psychology system specially designed to help you REACH YOUR FULL ATHLETIC POTENTIAL.

    learn more
  • SportsSuccess360

    Life strategies for performance and character development for coaches, parents, and student athletes competing in youth and interscholastic sports.

    Life Strategies learn more
  • Contact Dr. Stankovich

    1207 Grandview Ave., Suite #218, Columbus, OH 43212

    (614) 561-4482

    Media & General Inquiries

    information@drstankovich.com

    Sales & Product Support

    sales@drstankovich.com

  • About Dr. Stankovich

    • Media
    • Blog
    • Testimonials
  • Products

    • Toolkits
    • Videos
    • Books
    • Audio
    • iPhone Apps
  • Services

    • Athlete Performance Training
    • Parent Community Forum
    • Coach Education & Development
    • Athletic Crisis Response and Intervention
    • Drug & Alcohol Assessment
    • Life Success Programs
    • Counseling & Consulting Services
  • Blog
  • YouTube
  • twitter
  • facebook

All rights reserved © 2026 Advanced Human Performance Systems™

↓ ↓