The Psychology of Sports
On The Couch: An Analysis of Current Topics and Issues
in Sports
By Dr. Richard Lustberg and Charles Deitch
Steroids: Jason, Bobby, Sammy and The Fans
As the most recent revelations regarding the confirmed
steroid use by some of sports' biggest athletes continue
to roll out of the closet, many fans, and others connected
to the sports world are in total shock.
Their worlds have been rocked.
"You mean to tell me that Jason Giambi and now
Barry Bonds and a potato sack full of famous and not-so-famous
baseball players have been taking steroids?"
they're asking inquisitively. "How could I have
been so blind? Where have I been all these years?
"Did my eyes deceive me when I saw Barry Bomb,
Jason Gigantic, and maybe even Sammy So-Urge morph
into muscled-bodied superheroes who accomplished feats
that even Willie Mays could not? What must I have
been thinking?"
The real question here, however, is what were the
fans and the baseball community thinking? The answer
is simple. They weren't. Based upon media reports,
interviews, and water-cooler gossip, there appears
to be an atmosphere of denial, mixed with ambivalence,
and sprinkled with tacit acceptance.
Denial is a very powerful psychological tool and
coping mechanism that is used pervasively by individuals.
There are a million drug addicts out there who will
tell you they don't have a problem. Others are in
denial about their relationships, jobs, and just about
anything else dealing with life on this planet.
There are many athletes who remain in denial. O.J
still believes he is not guilty; Pete Rose still thinks
his career and reputation smells like one; and Barry
the Bomb has told us he was just using a sophisticated
version of Ben Gay? And what about Scott Peterson,
Has he confessed yet? Oops, wrong reference. While
Peterson made lying look like an Olympic event, he's
no athlete.
So why should sports fans be any different from the
rest of us? It is amazing how many people who watch
the WWE remain convinced that what they see on the
screen and in arenas is not scripted. So, it is just
a short emotional jump to apply our natural tendencies
toward denial to baseball.
Why are the fans in denial? Because what they obtain
from sporting events and players fulfills a great
deal of their psychological and emotional needs. In
the face of overwhelming evidence against these players,
what else could explain their reaction? In terms of
Barry Bonds, it is clear that many fans are and remain
thrilled and excited to see him perform his on-field
feats.
The psychological escape and the need to fulfill our
desires to watch our heroes succeed, allows us to
overlook the obvious. We need these players to do
this for us because we fear there wouldn't be anything
else to get excited about.
Some may say we have not progressed as a civilization
from the days of the Roman Coliseum where the crowds
roared as two warriors fought to death, or when the
Mayans used to sacrifice the captain of a losing team
of an ancient basketball-style game. However, we are
making progress when compared to these historic sporting
event highlights of the past.
Common sense also suggests that a certain subset
of fan does not care whether Barry, Jason or Sammy,
are found to have used performance enhancing drugs.
After all, it does not affect the fan's life, and
to see one of these players hit an indescribable moon
shot is worth the risk to the player's life. It's
just a game, a form of entertainment. If players want
to jeopardize their careers and health, who are we
to stop them?
We live in an era where performance-enhancing drugs,
like Viagra, Levitra, Botox, and other sophisticated
narcotics, are commonplace. So it's no surprise that
some fans simply shrug when they learn their favorite
players are juiced up.
Also overlooked, is the fact that some fans themselves
are taking illegal substances in gyms, in homes and
on playing fields across the country. To condemn these
athletes would be hypocritical and, at the very least,
would force self-condemnation and self-introspection
by these fans. For a lot of people it's easier to
live in a world of denial and rationalization than
to come to grips with their own issues.
We are a society of great scientific advancements.
We are also a society that has no problem bastardizing
those advancements for the exact opposite purpose
than was intended. Sadly, thanks to the actions of
Barry, Jason and others, as well as the blatant blind
eye turned by the public, it looks as if we'll become
more infamous for the bastardization, than famous
for the discovery.
More from Dr. Richard Lustberg at, The
Psychology of Sports
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