Run, Swim, Throw, Cheat cover art

Run, Swim, Throw, Cheat

The Science Behind Drugs in Sport

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Run, Swim, Throw, Cheat

By: Chris Cooper
Narrated by: Kieran Phoenix
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About this listen

Drugs in sport are big news and the use of performance-enhancing drugs in sport is common. Here, Chris Cooper, a top biochemist at the University of Essex, looks at the science behind drugs in sport. Using the performance of top athletes, Cooper begins by outlining the limits of human performance. Showing the basic problems of human biochemistry, physiology, and anatomy, he looks at what stops us running faster, throwing longer, or jumping higher. Using these evidence-based arguments he shows what the body can, and cannot, do. There is much curiosity about why certain substances are used, how they are detected, and whether they truly have an effect on the body. Cooper explains how these drugs work and the challenges of testing for them, putting in to context whether the 'doping' methods of choice are worth the risk or the effort.

Exploring the moral, political, and ethical issues involved in controlling drug use, Cooper addresses questions such as 'What is cheating?', 'What compounds are legal and why?', 'Why do the classification systems change all the time?', and 'Should all chemicals be legal, and what effect would this have on sport?'. Looking forward, he examines the recent work to study the physical limitations of rat and mice behaviour. He shows that, remarkably, simple genetic experiments producing 'supermice' suggest that there may be ways of improving human performance too, raising ethical and moral questions for the future of sport.

©2012 Chris Cooper (P)2013 Audible, Inc.
Addiction & Recovery Social Sciences Sociology of Sports Sports Cycling Law Morality

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All stars
Most relevant
A sadly appalling narration. Miss pronunciation of some very basic and hugely important words and terminology that detracts from a fascinating book. Whoever was responsible for the editing needs firing. A poor representation of the author’s work. Do yourself a favour and buy the paperback.

Terrible pronunciation ruins a brilliant book.

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The information in this book is excellent and very interesting but the patronising tone (as though reading to a 3 year old) and very frequent mispronunciations of the narrator made it very difficult to access the book.

Good Book. Very bad narration

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Terrible narrator cannot pronounce some of the words. This distracts from a very good story.

A good listen

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Who on earth allowed this to be published in this state? The reader hasn't a clue how to pronounce the terms - even basic terms like 'vo2' are read as 'V O squared.'
The people behind this should have a long look at their quality control - absolutely terrible representation of good quality material. I feel sorry for the author.

Absolutely terrible narration.

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The science and information in this book is fascinating and well explained by the author. However the narrator has lead me to wish I purchased the print version. The narrator sounds throughout the book as though he is trying to in from me I have been miss-sold payment protection insurance. Frequent miss-pronunciations such as 'Animalies' for anomalies, 'EPA for EPO' and while explaining the problems of athletes lying about their age making the error of saying 'humans do (rather than don't) lay down a growth ring each year', 'vampire chick' for vampire chic..... This would be a pedantic complaint if the errors were not constant.

Great book, poor reader.

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