New Anti-Doping Message: You Can Never Win Your Reputation Back
A hard-hitting poster showing an athlete injecting a prohibited substance is at the centre of a new anti-doping awareness campaign.
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31 May 2010
A hard-hitting poster showing an athlete injecting a prohibited substance is at the centre of a new anti-doping awareness campaign launched today by the Minister for Sport, Kate Ellis.
This new campaign by the Australian Sports Anti-Doping Authority (ASADA) targets both up-and-coming and elite athletes with the message: You can never win your reputation back.
"This confronting poster sends the important message to athletes that doping is never okay and that your reputation, once lost, is something you can never get back," Ms Ellis said.
"Doping can ruin an athlete's health but it can be just as damaging for an athlete's reputation and ultimately has the potential to end careers."
Ms Ellis met with elite athletes who have thrown their support behind the campaign at Parliament House this morning.
Olympic and World Champion rower Amber Halliday, Western Bulldogs star Robert Murphy and Paralympic swimmer and world record holder Matthew Cowdrey have all been named as Campaign Ambassadors.
Ms Halliday, who has moved into cycling following her rowing career, agreed that the campaign message had to be spread at a grassroots level.
"I can relate to the pressure young athletes are under while trying to carve out a career in sport," Ms Halliday said.
"This campaign highlights the fact that no matter how good athletes get_no matter how many races they win or goals they score_it will all come crashing down if they have cheated through doping."
The Australian Government, through ASADA, aims to develop a sporting culture free from doping in which performance is based on an athlete's talent determination, courage and honesty.
To achieve this the Government works to provide a comprehensive anti-doping program for the Australian sports community, encompassing deterrence, detection and enforcement activities.
ASADA has developed its campaign based on research that shows reputation is a major concern for athletes when contemplating doping.
The You can never win your reputation back campaign will run through June and July and encourages everyone involved in sport to visit www.asada.gov.au and find out more about the risks and repercussions of doping.
"We want to remind athletes that this risk is real and that doping in sport is simply not worth it," Ms Ellis said.
Schools or local sporting organisations that are interested in ordering posters for display in classrooms and/or change rooms should call the ASADA Hotline on 13 000 ASADA (13 000 27232). Any Australian can play their part and stamp out doping by confidentially reporting suspicious doping activity to 13 000 ASADA (13 000 27232).
Contact for further information, images or interviews with athletes:
Ingrid Jonach, 0414 490 469 or ingrid@theearlybird.com.au
For more information, please contact the Minister's office on (02) 6277 7350
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