
Four-time Olympic champion Michael Johnson believes it is "unrealistic" to think athletics will ever be drug-free.
Six Jamaicans, including former 100m world-record
holder Asafa Powell and 2004 Olympic sprint relay champion Sherone
Simpson,
tested positive for banned substances
earlier this year.
"Athletics is a microcosm of real life," said American Johnson.
"In real life you will always have people who cheat. It's unrealistic to expect athletics to be drug-free."
“We need to look at a new format, package it better to engage more fans”Micahel Johnson
Johnson, who won 4x100m gold at
the 1992 Barcelona Games, the 200m and 400m double in Athens four years
later, and the 400m title in Sydney in 2000, believes the Olympics is
the saving grace of athletics but thinks the sport needs to adapt in
order to improve its appeal.
"Other sports may have fans that can put up with
[doping] but in athletics the fans want to see the Olympians hold true
to the Olympic ideal and values," he said.
"To be honest, if it weren't for the Olympics, athletics would be dead. Off the face of the earth."
He added: "Everyone loves to see people have a race but we're seeing too much emphasis placed on world records and not on the battle between the athletes.
"We must look closely at the sport and see what it is that people actually want to watch.
"Do we need the women's discus? A 3,000m and 5000m steeplechase at the same meeting? Nothing has happened to change the sport in my time.
"We need to look at a new format, package it better to engage more fans. Other sports have done it to increase their fan base, why can't athletics?"
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