Why We Shouldn’t Call Our Athletes “Cheaters” When They Get DQ’ed

When American swimmer Cody Miller was called for multiple dolphin kicks on the breaststroke leg of the American mixed medley relay at the Pan American Games last week, a wave of frustration erupted in cries of “cheater” for the Olympic medalist, especially given that this is not the first time that he has been called for the same infraction.

When reading those calls, I too became frustrated: not because of the DQ, but because of how obtuse the word “cheater” felt. It just didn’t make sense to me. If Lebron James fouls his opponents 6 times in a game, he is disqualified from further competition in that game, but I don’t think we’d label him a “cheater.”

Of course, it would be sanctimonious of me, given the position I sit in and the work I do, to say that elite athletes should be free from criticism. People don’t passionately follow sports only for the highs, they follow sports for the emotional roller coaster of the highs and the lows. The Cubs’ World Series win was the sweetest because of the 108 years of disappointment that came before. More-and-more athletes are understanding this and accepting it. While I still hear from some athletes (and their coaches and parents) who believe that they should be beyond reproach, most that I speak to ‘get it,’ and know that it comes with the territory if they want the sport to be commercially successful. Ultimately, while the negative reviews echo the longest, they are still a very small minority relative to the positive accolades and adulation that our elite swimmers receive.

So, I’m not here to tell anybody that they can’t be critical of athletes, or that what athletes do when they’re disqualified isn’t “cheating.” I don’t think that would do well to convince anyone anyway. Instead, I’ll share some thoughts that I posted on a thread about Miller’s DQ on a popular Facebook group for swim coaches, with some edits for clarity and venue. I hope that this alternative approach to ‘why we shouldn’t call Cody Miller a cheater’ will be more persuasive.

It’s this trend toward ‘labels’ and away from ‘stories’ and ‘facts.’ So and so is a “doper,” so and so is a “cheater,” so and so is “bad,” so and so is “a great guy,” so and so is a “hero.”

We’re all in such a hurry to sum up the totality of an individual in one word, one asterisk, one label, that we lose the nuance and complexity of humanity. Humans are complex, and we love that complexity – we see this in all of our favorite television shows like Game of Thrones, where characters oscillate between sympathetic and dastardly.

I just don’t know why we have to rush to put these one-word labels on people. I mean, I guess I know why people do it, because it’s easier to rally the masses behind one angry word than to try and describe to them a story. There’s so much information available these days, it takes a lot of work to really unpack full narratives, and intellectually can be easier to just pounce upon a word.

But I just think it’s counterproductive and takes a lot of the interest out of the story, out of the sport. To me, this is what it boils down to. You can think Cody Miller is a “cheater,” you can think Sun Yang is a “cheater,” you can think that Cameron van der Burgh is a “cheater,” you can think Michael Phelps is a “champion” or the “GOAT,” but to me, that thought, that exclamation that analysis really isn’t that interesting. In fact, it’s a rather boring narrative. If we’re going to stick our fingers in our ears boil all of our athletes down to 1 word, then nobody is going to care anymore. Everyone’s going to get bored.

Look at this from a different perspective, as a coach of just…regular… swimmers. If your athlete has a bad season, are they a “failure”? If they had a good season, are they a “success”? Or is the athlete who had a bad season a teenager who maybe was going through some stuff at home, missed too many practices, didn’t work hard enough when they were there, which resulted in bad times, and now has a decision to make about what their goals are in the sport and whether they’re willing to do the things they need to do to achieve those goals? Is your swimmer who won just “a success”? Or are they a swimmer who worked hard all season, combined that with great physical gifts, worked hard at practices, stayed late a few times to perfect that new start, took a risk on tweaking their turn 3 weeks before the big meet, fixed their head position, and that resulted in a huge time drop and a big medal at the big meet?

If we all focus more on the story and less on the label and we’ll all be less frustrated in general. We’ll all be less divisive, and less divided. We all have our story, an encyclopedia of experiences that make who we are, we all have skeletons and we all have moments to celebrate. Let’s be, and let our athletes be, all of those moments, not just one of them.

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Primarily Just a Lurker
4 years ago

Just as a counterpoint to the Lebron James point, he is absolutely called a flopper and a whiner due to his pattern of behavior and style of play. Draymond Green was called a cheater and referred to as a cheap player and whiner due to his pattern of behavior and style of play. In football, Ndamukong Suh was called a cheater due to his pattern of behavior and style of play. This is something that goes across all sports and is not just on Cody Miller. It is, however, due to his pattern of behavior and style of play. When the aforementioned players addressed the issue and changed their behavior, the issue (at least to an extent) subsided. That could… Read more »

Curious
4 years ago

If he touches first in the 100 br at trials but doesn’t make qualifying time, is it possible that USA could consider taking second place for the relay team?

Swimer
4 years ago

No. Cody Miller is a CHEATER. This isn’t new, and This community has been vocal about it for a LONG time. He has been disqualified multiple times over the past decade and still is has not changed, completely unapologetic. Taking multiple dolphin kicks is neither an accident nor a mistake; it is something done intentionally to gain an unfair advantage. People like him destroy the sanctity of this great stroke and I think it is completely appropriate to throw him in the same group with Sun Yang and the like. Kick him off the US Team. Take away his medal and give it to Cordes. I will never consider Miller a real elite-breaststroker until he actually wins a race without… Read more »

Amunnn
4 years ago

I wonder how many people here actually have studied the biomechanics of breaststroke 🤔 – or are elite breaststrokers – or have an affiliation with any of swimming’s governing bodies or officials. There are some seriously trash and ignorant comments here 🙄

Amunnn
Reply to  Amunnn
4 years ago

You are right. Especially about rules applying to all, not just elite swimmers. My point is that many comments exclaim that Cody Miller is a cheater who puts in a second dolphin kick into his pullouts. My interest in the study aspect, however, is that one of his kicks is clearly a dolphin kick, and the other is (not so clearly, but surely) not and Team USA said so themselves – and that’s all I meant regarding the biomechanics aspect because it’s a biomechanics issue. EVERYONE is entitled to their opinion as this is an open forum – the facts are, Cody Miller has been DSQ less than a handful of times for this issue. Less than a handful out… Read more »

KickingGeek
4 years ago

If you know what you are doing is against the rules and you do it anyway because it can give you an advantage, then yes, you are deliberately cheating. It is irrelevant if it is a game, a sport, speeding, or rolling stops at a stop sign when no one is in sight. It is irrelevant if no one sees, the deed is done.

Break a rule to gain advantage is cheating. No grey area there.

Jred
4 years ago

Imagine equating mistakes resulting in DQs with drug cheats like Yang and cheats like Miller.

Ridiculous article.

Jeff
4 years ago

Jared Anderson, SwimSwam author, cheater.

See here: https://youtu.be/TSCQ_9oSBPQ

Watch him do freestyle kicks in the 100 breast

Reply to  Jeff
4 years ago

In fact, this is a lot of why I think I can speak to this from a closer vantage point than most. And it’s why I empathize with Cody, despite being one of the guys who lost to Cody a whole lot in my career. During college, I started unconsciously doing a little jerky flutter kick with one foot between strokes, usually when I was really up-tempo and/or tired. My coaches caught it early on, especially with the help of underwater video, and we had to spend a long, long time trying to break that habit. You can focus on it as much as you want in practice, but at least for awhile, when you go into “race mode,” your… Read more »

Marklewis
Reply to  Jared Anderson
4 years ago

Your story provides an explanation for what may be happening with Cody and the dolphin kicks. He can do a lot toward repairing his reputation if it turns out his story is similar to yours. Having a problem with stroke technique is much different than doing it on purpose.

Rafael
4 years ago

All people saying he´s a cheater also think that of James Harden? If not, you call someone who usually goes 51 in an 50 road and hardly ever gets caught, a criminal?

About Braden Keith

Braden Keith

Braden Keith is the Editor-in-Chief and a co-founder/co-owner of SwimSwam.com. He first got his feet wet by building The Swimmers' Circle beginning in January 2010, and now comes to SwimSwam to use that experience and help build a new leader in the sport of swimming. Aside from his life on the InterWet, …

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