For Mack Horton, cheating looked pretty black and white one week ago.
His competitor Sun Yang, who stepped onto the podium to accept his gold medal was not a man who had a record of cheating, but a man who was a cheat. When the person in question lives more than nine thousand kilometres away, it’s easy to convince oneself there really is no difference.
At the 2016 Rio Olympics, Horton dismissed Sun as a “drug cheat” – a man who had no place whatsoever in the sport. It was a position most of the Australian swim team accepted. Back in 2014, Sun was suspended for three months after taking trimediazine, a substance that had been banned a few months prior. The six foot seven swim champion said he was prescribed the drug for heart palpitations – a claim the World Anti Doping Association accepted.
“Sun proved with sufficient evidence that he did not intend to cheat, which helped reduce the ban to three months,” WADA said at the time.
What does it take to be an Australian sporting hero? Post continues after video.
But Horton wasn’t interested in dissecting Sun’s intentions. There were no shades of grey.