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‘People’s opinions aren’t going to pay me’: Ireland’s Shane Ryan on his decision to join Enhanced Games

about 18 hours ago
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Swimmer who represented Ireland at three Olympics says controversial event provides chance to set up financial futureWhen Shane Ryan agreed to ­participate in the Enhanced Games – where performance-enhancing drugs are encouraged – he did not agonise: “I was like, you know what, let me do something for me for once.Let me make some money.”The swimmer represented Ireland at three Olympics, in 2016, 2020 and 2024, but all those years of training and sacrifice were not paying the bills, so this week he announced he would compete at the controversial event.“My whole 20s I gave to Ireland,” says the 31-year-old from a training camp in Las Vegas, where the tournament will take place.“Olympic ­athletes train so hard all their life and they just don’t get paid.

”Irish sporting authorities, commentators and even the taoiseach, Micheál Martin, condemned Ryan’s decision, but he is unrepentant.­“People’s opinions aren’t going to pay me.They’re not going to help me set up my future.”The International Olympic Committee and the World Anti-Doping Agency have also condemned the Enhanced Games – calling them a betrayal of sporting values and dangerous to health – but Ryan, who recently retired from competitive swimming, is eyeing the prize money.“Ideally, I would like to pay my car off and then hopefully put a down payment on a house somewhere in Philadelphia.

I need to be very, very smart with money because life’s ­getting a lot more expensive.”It is a blunt and prosaic response to the uproar over the Olympics-style event that will debut next May with athletes allowed, and in some cases incentivised, to use banned ­substances under medical supervision.Organisers cast it as a radical alternative to traditional sport that will showcase what they call ­“superhumanity” by normalising pharmaceutical and technological enhancement in sprinting, ­swimming and weightlifting.“Our athletes exhibit integrity by enhancing openly under medical guidance, being informed and consenting adults, and ultimately the decision maker on which substances they choose to include in their protocols,” Maximilian Martin, the CEO and co-founder of the Enhanced Games, says via email.The tournament, which is backed by Silicon Valley tycoons and ­Donald Trump Jr, has announced a dozen athletes, but more have signed up, said Martin.

“We’re strategically holding some announcements to build momentum closer to the event,The full weightlifting roster is already signed, both men and women,”The 3-Olympic silver medallist Ben Proud, 30, last month became the first Briton to sign up, prompting criticism from UK Sport and ­Aquatics GB, which said it was “immensely disappointed”,Now it is the turn of Irish officials to lament,Ryan grew up in Philadelphia and won medals for Ireland at world, European and university level and holds 10 solo Irish records.

A solid, middle-of-the-road career – “nobody’s idea of a headline act on the global stage,” the Irish Times said – but his communication skills on social media and in interviews offer another asset to the Enhanced Games.Sign up to The RecapThe best of our sports journalism from the past seven days and a heads-up on the weekend’s actionafter newsletter promotionRyan said he was proud and ­grateful for the chance to represent Ireland, but had struggled to live on €18,000 (£15,600) a year and that “flaws” in the Irish swimming administration impeded his progress.“No one really gives a shit too much about swimming except for every four years when the Olympics come around.”Facing uncertain prospects at the next Olympics, when he would be 34, Ryan retired this month and accepted the invitation to compete at Las Vegas, where there is prize money of up to $500,000 per event, with a $1m bonus for record-breaking performances.“I will always and for ever ­support 100% clean athletes when ­competing for the Olympic Games.

It has to be protected,” says Ryan.The Enhanced Games had their own integrity, he insists.“No one’s ­cheating here because everyone is being transparent.”The plan is to relocate to Abu Dhabi in December to start a drug regime, then return for the ­tournament.­“Everyone thinks that we’re on drugs right now, but we are not.

You still need to train.”Doctors will customise drugs for each athlete, he said.“We don’t even know what we’re going to be taking because everyone’s going to be a bit different.It’s not about gaining size.It’s about trying to gain strength.

”Critics are “freaking out”, but the Enhanced Games are here to stay, says Ryan.“This thing isn’t going away.I’ll tell you that right now.”
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Thousands in UK take legal action against Johnson & Johnson over alleged talc cancer link

Thousands of people are taking legal action against the US pharmaceutical company Johnson & Johnson, claiming it knowingly sold baby powder containing asbestos-contaminated talc in the UK.About 3,000 people have alleged that they or a family member developed forms of ovarian cancer or mesothelioma from using Johnson’s Baby Powder, and are seeking damages at the high court in London.Lawyers for the group said Johnson & Johnson, along with its current and former subsidiaries Johnson & Johnson Management and Kenvue UK, should all be held liable, according to court documents filed on Thursday by KP Law. It estimates the claims amount to more than £1bn.The lawyers said J&J “concealed” the risk to the public for decades

about 14 hours ago
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IMF chief reveals worries about private credit market keep her awake at night – as it happened

The head of the IMF has revealed that worries about a crisis in the private credit market keeps her awake at night, sometimes.Kristalina Georgieva was asked at today’s press briefing whether she is concerned about the health of the private credit markets, following the collapse of US auto parts supplier First Brands and car dealership Tricolor in recent weeks.Those failures prompted the boss of JP Morgan, Jamie Dimon, to warn this week that more “cockroaches” could emerge from the private credit sector.Q: Is this a concern for you about the health of the credit market – could it boil over into a crisis? How prepared is the world to cope with another crisis?Georgieva replies that the IMF is “concerned”, which it made clear in the financial stability report it issued this week.She says there has been a “very significant shift of financing” from the banking sector to non-bank financial institutions, to a point where more than half of financing is now there

about 16 hours ago
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Launch of veteran card will be used to test UK government’s digital ID scheme

Former military personnel will be used to test and refine the government’s divisive digital ID scheme from Friday, when ministers make a smartphone-based veteran card available to 1.8 million people.The proof of service, which in its current physical version gives access to charities, retail discounts and certain public services, will be the first of a series of official credentials the government wants to let people carry in a government app.Digital driving licences will be in development by the end of this year and by the end of 2027, digital versions of every government-issued credential – including disclosure and barring checks – will be offered for voluntary use, officials said. Keir Starmer wants to make carrying a digital ID mandatory for anyone wanting or needing to prove their right to work in the UK by the end of this parliament

about 8 hours ago
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Heed warnings from Wolmar on robotaxis | Brief letters

In assessing the merits of driverless taxis (Driverless taxis from Waymo will be on London’s roads next year, US firm announces, 15 October), passengers should consider the cautions presented in Christian Wolmar’s book Driverless Cars: On a Road to Nowhere. Adherence to Isaac Asimov’s first law of robotics (“A robot may not injure a human being”) requires the taxi to stop if a person steps in front of it. Highway robbery or worse may be facilitated.Prof Clive CoenKing’s College London Your article (Parliamentary staff of colour earn £2,000 less than white colleagues, study suggests, 12 October) says that disabled employees earn £646 less a year “than able-bodied colleagues”. Disabilities come in many forms, not all physical

about 14 hours ago
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England and New Zealand find ‘special’ camaraderie amid hard graft

As a gruelling 2025-26 schedule begins with a T20 series, both tourists and hosts stress the importance of enjoymentEngland’s white-ball team have played 24 times this year, most recently a little more than three weeks ago. New Zealand’s have played 28 games, the latest was this month. These are groups who spend a lot of time together, but before the start of their Twenty20 series on Saturday both chiselled some space out of their schedule to do something surprisingly unusual with each other: nothing very much.Brendon McCullum took his team to Queenstown in New Zealand’s Southern Alps where, in Harry Brook’s words, they were “just left to our own devices”. There was some hiking, a bit of go-karting and, inevitably, a lot of golf

about 12 hours ago
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Mohammed Ben Sulayem set to remain FIA president after Mayer denied by arcane rule

Mohammed Ben Sulayem will stand unopposed for another term as the president of the FIA, motor sport’s governing body. The last remaining candidate is due to pull out on Friday because of an arcane election rule.Tim Mayer, a former FIA senior steward with 15 years in the role until he was sacked last November, was one of three candidates who had announced they would oppose Ben Sulayem, alongside the former racing driver Laura Villars and the Belgian journalist Virginie Philippot.None of them, however, are able to meet the FIA requirements for the election process. Mayer is expected to formally announce the end of his campaign in Austin on Friday , the Guardian understands, where he will make clear the reasons behind it and his assessment of the current electoral process

about 15 hours ago
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Women’s Cricket World Cup: Australia storm to 10-wicket win over Bangladesh

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Bill Belichick built an empire on control. But UNC is letting chaos reign | Andrew Lawrence

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‘People’s opinions aren’t going to pay me’: Ireland’s Shane Ryan on his decision to join Enhanced Games

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NFL hot seat index: which coaches are running out of time?

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No Ashes talk in England camp, says Harry Brook before New Zealand series

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Ricky Hatton is thought to have killed himself, inquest told

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