Les wrote:
For me it would make no difference since I already stated I believe he blood doped. But I believe it would do the sport good for people to admit what they did. Lance Armstrong also denied he used PEDs -- up until the moment he admitted he did. Obviously personal denials mean nothing. Everyone who has tested positive has either denied knowingly taking a PED or come up with crazy excuses like "spiked toothpaste" (Dieter Baumann) or "multiple sex and alcohol" (Dennis Mitchell) or birth control (Mary Slaney). The only guy who has (somewhat) admitted doping is Tyson Gay, who has still not provided any details on how the PED got into his system. I admire him for at least going that far, which is much more than Gatlin ever did. I could give Viren the benefit of the doubt even with his performances dropping noticeably in non-Olympic years. No, I do not believe "serious injuries" caused his fall-off in 1973, 1974, 1975, 1977, 1978 and 1979. Remember this was a guy who easily, in 3 out of 4 Olympic races, defeated the best in the world, even easier than Farah has. The rest of the time he ran like runner he probably was, talented, hard-working, but not head and shoulders better than everyone else in the world. The thing that makes me (and others) think that Viren doped is that he comes from a country with a history of verified doping busts -- runners and cross country skiers. To me it makes no sense for a lesser runner to have blood doped while the multiple medal winner has not. For a guy to produce superhuman performances makes me think he was on something. If he consistently ran at the level he did in the Olympics I would be more inclined to think he was clean, but he never did, not once. Blood doping is a potentially dangerous procedure. It has to be done with a doctor's supervision. With his emphasis on the Olympics blood doping all the time wouldn't be worth the risk - what would be the reward for it?
Viren was injured to the point of needing surgery on several occasions.