From the NYT, a Well Blog post about Olympic athletes, many of whom will undoubtedly be taking Epo (the new blood doping), which is dangerous, maybe very dangerous:
There’s a well-known survey in sports, known as the Goldman Dilemma. For it, a researcher, Bob Goldman, began asking elite athletes in the 1980s whether they would take a drug that guaranteed them a gold medal but would also kill them within five years. More than half of the athletes said yes. When he repeated the survey biannually for the next decade, the results were always the same. About half of the athletes were quite ready to take the bargain.
Only recently did researchers get around to asking nonathletes the same question. In results published online in February, 2009 in the British Journal of Sports Medicine, exactly 2 of the 250 people surveyed in Sydney, Australia, said that they would take a drug that would ensure both success and an early death. “We were surprised,” James Connor, Ph.D., a lecturer at the University of New South Wales and one of the study’s authors, said in an e-mail message. “I expected 10-20 percent yes.” His conclusion, unassailable if inexplicable, is that “elite athletes are different from the general population, especially on desire to win.”
So not all elite athletes are qualitatively different than normal people, but about 50% of elite (or super-elite; I don't know the methodology, or what the label means) are different than 99.2% of people who are not elite athletes. They will literally die to for "sports glory," i.e, to win, and win big.
Kind of explains why we have so many stories of world-class athletes doing stupid, illegal, bad things. Why Kobe Bryant allegedly raped that woman in Eagle, Colorado; why Michael Vick ran a dog-fighting ring; why Tiger Woods was carrying on about a dozen sleazy affairs. If you need to win, if winning at all costs is the primary thing driving you in life, is the only thing you care about, serious transgressions from social norms are understandable.1
[1] Unlike the other transgressions, Vick's dog-fighting might be explainable by different social norms — in his subculture, dog-fighting was arguably socially acceptable, much like cock-fighting in Mexico or bull-fighting in Spain. I'm not sure about it, but I've seen it claimed. Either way, I think the basic generalization still makes sense.
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