History Daily - Ben Johnson’s Olympic Gold
Episode Date: September 24, 2025September 24, 1988. Ben Johnson wins the men’s 100 meters final at the Seoul Olympics, only to be stripped of his medal three days later. This episode originally aired in 2024. Support the show! Jo...in Into History for ad-free listening and more.History Daily is a co-production of Airship and Noiser.Go to HistoryDaily.com for more history, daily.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Salku X,
tapam we again.
Viser number,
five vizette,
Arvauksia,
Patheria.
Palkintone
X-Peng G-K-Sahcrow,
Towsin-Omack-Tor
10-weekcua'clock
in time
to write-cuitteas
Pover.
P.F.
Coutta, A-L-JECD.
It's September 24th,
1980,
at the Olympic Stadium in Seoul, South Korea.
On the track,
27-year-old American athlete Carl Lewis
bounces up and down,
warming up for the flagship event of the Olympic Games,
the final of the men's 100 meters.
Four years ago, Carl won gold in this event
at the Los Angeles Olympics.
But since then, a new rival has emerged.
Canadian Ben Johnson is the current world champion
and world record holder,
and most analysts think that he's the only
athlete capable of taking the Olympic title from Carl. And now it's all down to the result of this
one race. The announcer calls for quiet and the runners take their positions. Carl puts his feet in the
starting blocks, sets himself and waits for the pistol shot that will begin the race. Carl explodes out
of the blocks, pumping his legs to try to reach top speed as quickly as possible. But out of the
corner of his eye, he can see that Ben Johnson is already a stride.
ahead. Carl keeps running with as much effort as he can muster, but the gap only increases.
With 10 meters to go, Ben lifts his right arm and points to the sky, signaling that he is number
one. Carl crosses the finish line just behind it. He could do no more, but his best is only
good enough for second place. With a new world record time of 9.79 seconds, it's Ben Johnson,
who's the new Olympic champion. Later that day,
Carl Lewis and Ben Johnson will stand side by side on the podium.
Carl's face will be a picture of disappointment as he's handed a silver medal.
Ben will stand proud as he's awarded the gold.
But just three days later, the sporting world will be thrown into a state of turmoil
when Ben Johnson is forced to return the Olympic gold medal he won over Carl Lewis
on September 24, 1988.
We're atle.
Weiss number,
5.
VEGETT,
Arvauxia,
Patheria.
Poweria.
Palkintona X-Peng G-K-S
Sacko,
Towsin'omaxe.
10-weekcua
a while
to retka-corder
POSOSOS.
A.m.
Don't get toidist.
We AGI-Dotteal
all we all we
toottealmns
Hivel-jocting
is a good
and give to
be a good
and give up
and add a
co-attressel
work-etoo
part of
the time
so it's
not
much than
the
but the
people
it's
a matter
sure
so much
hope
H.S.
Tapa
we're
we're
numbera
five numbera
five
vietta
arvors
and
Poveria.
Palkintona X-B-G-Q
Sackco, Sacko,
Towsin-omacki.
10-weekcoa
in a while
to write to
co-o-o-o-X.
Don't get-kydist.
From Noisor in Airship,
I'm Lindsay Graham,
and this is History Daily.
History is made every day.
On this podcast, every day,
we tell the true stories
of the people and events.
that shaped our world. Today is September 24, 1988, Ben Johnson's Olympic gold. It's August 4th,
1984 in Los Angeles, California, four years before the Olympic Games and Seoul. 50-year-old scientist Dr.
Robert Voie hunches over a gas chromatograph attached to a computer. He checks that the equipment
is set up correctly before tapping in a command on the keyboard. The chromatograph fires to life
and Robert turns away to prepare yet another urine sample.
While the 1984 Olympic Games are taking place on the other side of Los Angeles,
Robert is pulling long shifts in this laboratory,
carrying out tests on urine samples provided by athletes.
It's Robert's job to find out whether any of the competitors have been cheating.
For as long as organized sport has existed,
athletes have sought to gain an advantage over their rivals.
Some have taken infusions and medications,
including opiates to improve their stamina,
while competitors and other events have used stimulants
to ensure they perform their best.
But over the past few decades,
there's been an explosion in the use of performance-enhancing drugs.
Thanks to the propaganda boost associated with sporting success,
athletes in communist Eastern Europe and the USSR
have been pressured to take testosterone and anabolic steroids
to develop bigger and more powerful muscles.
Meanwhile, in countries like the USA,
there are lucrative endorsement deals and sponsorships at stake for the top athletes.
The desire to earn more money has pressured some athletes to take drugs that will improve their performance.
And now, the International Olympic Committee, or IOC, is battling to keep a level playing field
in the world's flagship festival of sport, the Olympics.
As Robert takes another test tube from Iraq, a beep on his computer catches his attention.
The screen shows a graph that indicates the presence of the presence of the world.
nitrogen or phosphorus. Those two elements are signs that performance-enhancing drugs may be in the
urine sample currently being tested, but to make sure, Robert runs the sample through a mass
spectrometer, and the results from that test are clear. The athlete who provided this sample
has taken a banned substance. Robert quickly notifies the IOC of the positive test, and the
Swedish weightlifter who provided the sample is disqualified from the Olympics. His result is voided,
and he's stripped of the silver medal he won just a few days ago.
Although Robert has caught a drug cheat, he isn't pleased.
He views every positive test with disappointment.
Still, he's surprised by how few other athletes have tested positive.
He knows drug use in sport is rife.
But somehow, athletes that Robert is certain have taken performance-enhancing drugs
are providing clean samples.
So when the Olympic Games comes to an end,
Robert decides to dig deeper into the use of these trucks, and he soon becomes convinced that the entire testing system is flawed.
Some competitors are exploiting a loophole by taking human growth hormones.
These help athletes build muscle and recover faster from workouts, but they're impossible to detect in a laboratory, so they aren't officially a banned substance.
As a result, a shadowy trade has developed.
Athletes and coaches use dubious medical practitioners who will prescribe the hormones,
hormones with few questions asked in return for large sums of money.
Other athletes are prepared to gamble and use ban drugs,
but they mask their illegal activity by taking additional substances to flush the drugs out of their system.
Robert often finds that the urine sample he's taken to test are clear as water,
a frustrating sign that the athlete may be taking performance-enhancing drugs,
but have used means to flush them out, and Robert has no way of proving it.
And even when Robert does detect traces of banned drugs, he often finds the response from sporting authorities disappointing.
A positive test does not necessarily lead to disqualification.
Instead, many sports want to hide the issue under the rug to avoid negative headlines.
And even sometimes, samples that have tested positive then mysteriously go missing.
On other occasions, athletes win appeals against their results with scarcely believable explanations of how,
the banned substances ended up in their samples. Despite the frustration, though, doctors like Robert
will continue their crusade to clean up sports and rid of cheating. But they'll be swimming against the
tide until rumors emerge that incriminate the most famous athletes in the world. Finally, the media
will begin to shine a spotlight on the practice, and the scandal will become global news after
performance-enhancing drugs mar the reputation of the flagship event in men's track and field to
100 meter sprint.
Aj-tootteets, Kirste,
really,
we'll have enough
to doctuctions.
KERRYMENT
We'll let them
headmessen
headmns.
Maelmast
all over
soon.
Six time
is the
time and the
time to putt
touottel
you can't
work for
the place
and newpto
dotutteat
point F.
AJ2bted.
Ajetus
from
Antiguaumas
We're
not even
uskala
things,
because they
are quite
But they're not
They're not
They're
Because we
We're
We're
We're used
They're
Not quite
It's not
It's
It's not
It's over
Gohting
It's
Owebara
And I
give and
give you
HSA
Lonsu
So it
doesn't
makese
you're
much than
viitsimist
But
the
work
It's a
Mucco
Soe
good
Toive
HSU
H.
Tappamed
We're
Wee
number
VE
Viett
Arvauxia
Poveria
Palkintona
X-BG-G-6
Sacko
Towsin'
omics
10-weekcoa
aika
Rackkaider
Pover.
Pover.
POS.
F.
KOTT, Kirste,
and
don't get
Kyrs,
we're right,
we'll have
nopeat
Toimitutes,
but we're
in the
product we
let's getm
we're
getting
up much
more more.
Six the
time is
pithuptop in
the same
and the
time.
A.G.
Tuottteilta
you can't
calusteat
co-teapes
and newpeat
dotusts.
Tutusts
list, AJ2otte.
com.
It's August
30th,
1987 in an
athletic stadium
in Rome,
Italy, a year
before the
1988 1988
Olympic Games.
American athlete
Carl Lewis
strains every
muscle as he
dips over the
finish line
in the
final of the
100 meters
at the
World Athletics
Championship.
As he slows
down
Carl glances over at the scoreboard, and he scarcely believes what he sees.
Carl's just run his fastest ever race, matching the world record of 9.93 seconds, but it's still not
good enough to win. Instead, 25-year-old Canadian sprinter Ben Johnson has just obliterated the
field by running in 9.83 seconds, smashing the world record by a tenth of a second.
Three years ago, though, Ben Johnson was only fast enough.
to win the bronze medal in the 100 meters at the Los Angeles Olympic Games.
Since then, he's shown a staggering improvement in his performance.
Ben was always an explosive sprinter, who was quick out of the blocks,
but he tended to fade in the second half of the race.
That changed after Ben began working with coach Charlie Francis.
He bulked up to improve his stamina.
His muscles became bigger and his body tighter.
And it all seemed to pay off.
One year after the Los Angeles Olympics,
Ben finally outran Carl Lewis after eight consecutive losses.
Now, Ben is beaten Carl again at the World Championships.
As the crowd chants Ben's name and Ben waves back, Carl chases after him.
He grabs Ben's hands, trying to say a few words.
But Ben shakes him off.
He thinks Carl is being a sore loser and wants nothing to do with him.
So as Ben celebrates, Carl is left to mutter to himself as he walks off the track
and away from the glare of the cameras.
Ben was right. Carl is a bad loser. He is sure that Ben made a false start in the race,
but he also suspects that there's more to Ben's win than leaving the blocks a fraction of a second early.
When they compete together at athletics meetings, Carl has spotted a yellow tint to Ben's eyes,
an indicator that he's been taking steroids. Carl's frustration spills over into the media.
When he's interviewed on television after the world championships, Carl is questioned about doping in sports.
He admits that the use of performance-enhancing drugs is common in sprinting.
And though Carl doesn't name names, he heavily implies that Ben Johnson's meteoric rise
has been aided by illegal substances.
The claim is backed by another American sprinter Calvin Smith,
the previous owner of the 100-meters world record.
Both Carl and Calvin professed to be clean,
and they complain they're competing against rivals who have an unfair advantage.
And a few months later, Carl is notified of a problem.
positive drug test. But it's not Ben Johnson who's been caught. It's Carl himself. Small amounts of
stimulants have been found in a urine sample he provided after the U.S. Olympic trials. The consequences
of the positive test are potentially dire. Carl faces a lengthy ban and the prospect of missing
the Olympic Games. So he launches a campaign to clear his name, claiming that the banned
substances ended up in his body after taking an over-the-counter medication. The officials accept his
reasoning. The ruling is overturned, Carl is cleared, and after weeks of worry, Carl is confirmed
as a member of the American track team for the 1988 Olympics in Seoul. But shortly before his
planned departure for South Korea, Carl's preparations are interrupted by the death of his father.
At the funeral, Carl takes one of the Olympic gold medals he won in Los Angeles and places it
in his father's open coffin. Carl then bends close to his father's ear and promises he'll win another
and soul to replace it. But Carl doesn't win the medal he wants more than any other. On September 24th,
1988, he finishes second to rival Ben Johnson in the 100 meters. And moments after the end of the race,
Carl again chases Ben down the track. And just like in Rome, Carl wants to say something to the
man who's just beaten him. This time, Ben turns his back on Carl. Carl then forcefully grabs Ben's
hand and shakes it in congratulations. But the ill-feeling,
between the two men is evident to all who witness it.
Carl will spend the next three days fuming
about the gold medal that he sure has been stolen from him.
Meanwhile, the press will hail Ben Johnson
as the fastest man alive and one of the greatest athletes of all time.
But soon, news will emerge that will completely upend the narrative
and grant Carl Lewis the Olympic gold medal he promised his father.
I'm a lot of the anti-roaumst.
We're using
things,
because they are
very much they're
not quite.
But they're not
good,
I hope
H.S.
Tapa
we're
weiss
number,
vii,
five vietta,
arvokes,
and the
palttellu
power
power.
Palkintona
X-B
G-G-K
Sackco,
Towsin
omics,
10-week
a time
to write
in the
coda
coteas
Coutta
X.
Al
j-j-
We AJ-tootteer,
we A&2twe all-tollects
we're allowed
in afts in a few-tukes'
jubbillist cah
or ajaatrucilla
four-certain ma'amian
and casvanteau
and can't beauntlete
afto'clock
all theopo-vetya-vety.
Katso-lis-i-i-i-tuitteet.fi.
Ajetushoardst
Antiquita Roma.
We're not
to be able to do things, because they are
very little.
But they're not
not quite because
we can't
uskallate
it.
History has
it is a
good toftamining
is a good
and let you
dohtesel
and add a
jobmater's
time.
So it's
not much
than viitzimist
but
the people
it's a
make a
sure stestor
a
co-cocoo-
All the good.
It's the early hours of the morning on September 27, 1988,
at the Olympic Village in Seoul, South Korea,
three days after Ben Johnson's victory in the 100-meters final.
Carl Lewis, the athlete who came second,
stirs from sleep as the phone beside his bed rings.
He groans as he sees the time on the clock.
Although the 100 meters is over,
Carl still has other events to compete in,
and he needs his rest.
But the American Olympic official,
the other end of the line has woken Carl to deliver some astounding news. Ben Johnson has failed a drug
test. Carl is speechless. For the last three days, he's replayed the 100 meters final over and over
in his head. He doesn't think there's anything he could have done differently to beat Ben.
But now, Carl has been handed the victory off the track. The International Olympic Committee
quickly organizes a press conference where the news is confirmed. Ben Johnson is disqualified.
and removed from the results.
He's ordered to return his gold medal,
and second-place finisher Carl Lewis is now the new Olympic champion.
Ben Johnson doesn't just lose his gold medal, though.
He's also banned from competing for three years.
Ben and his coach claimed that he was the victim of a conspiracy,
that his drink was spiked.
But when this doesn't work, athlete and coach turn on each other.
Ben claims that it was his coach that supplied the steroids
and that he didn't understand what he was taking.
Only when another Canadian athlete turns whistleblower,
does Ben finally admit his role in the affair.
So as well as the Olympic gold medal,
he's stripped of the title he won at the World Championships in Rome,
and his record-breaking runs are struck from the history books.
But Ben Johnson will also claim that he's been scapegoated
in an era in which drug-taking was all too common.
In total, six of the eight athletes who ran in the 100-meter final
at the Seoul Olympics will later be embroiled in doping scandals, and Carl Lewis will be among them.
In 2003, an American doctor will publicly reveal Carl's failed drug test after the U.S. Olympic
trials in 1988. He'll allege that officials kept the positive test quiet so Carl could compete in
Seoul. In response, Ben Johnson will call for the IOC to strip Carl of his medals in the same way
Ben lost his, but his request will be denied, and Carl will later be exonerated. And Carl will later be exonerated.
once again. In the years since the Seoul Olympics, sporting authorities have up their efforts to
identify drug use. Athletes are now tested out of competition, and more rigorous procedures have been
developed to catch those who are prepared to gain an unfair advantage. It's harder than ever
for athletes to cheat the system, and although many still fall foul of regulations, the men's 100-meter
final that was dubbed the dirtiest race in history, remains athletics' most high-profile scandal.
after Ben Johnson cheated his way to a gold medal on September 24, 1988.
Next, on History Daily, September 25, 1066, King Herald of England defeats a Viking invasion
at a tumultuous battle near York.
From Noisor and Airship, this is History Daily, boasted, edited, and executive produced by me, Lindsay Graham,
audio editing by Mohamed Shazi, sound design by Gabriel Gould, music by Throm.
This episode is written and researched by Owen Paul Nichols.
Edited by Scott Reeves, Managing Producer Emily Burr. Executive producers are William Simpson for airship and Pascal Hughes for Noiser.
