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Watch: the controversial ad in which Ben Johnson ‘glorifies drug cheats’

Australian sports betting company is slammed by the government for using doping as a theme to promote its gambling app

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Ben Johnson (left) raises his arm in triumph after crossing the finish line first in the Seoul Olympics 100m final in 1988. Photo: AFP
Agence France-Presse

A controversial commercial by an Australian sports betting company featuring disgraced sprinter Ben Johnson has been slammed by the government for glorifying drug cheats.

The 90-second advert by gambling firm Sportsbet introduces Johnson, at a desk surrounded by a medal and a trophy, as the 1988 Olympic gold medallist while attempting to make light of the scene by superimposing “*For 48 hours” below the fallen star.

Watch: Sportsbet ad with Ben Johnson

“When it comes to performance enhancement Ben really knows his stuff, which is why he is happy to endorse Sportsbet’s new juiced-up Android app,” the narrator says, claiming the firm’s phone betting application was putting “the roid into Android”.

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Australian Sports Minister Greg Hunt blasted the ad as “sending a message that cheating’s okay and should be rewarded and laughed at and glorified”.

“They’re glorifying a drug cheat and they’re paying a known drug cheat a huge princely sum of money,” he told radio station 2GB.

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“So it’s an insult to clean athletes and, frankly, my view is they should pull the ad and they should pay the same amount to junior sport as they paid a known drug cheat.”

Johnson was stripped of his 100-metre gold medal in the 1988 Seoul Olympics after testing positive for steroids.

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