The last couple of weeks have seen a rash of athletes succumb to failed drug tests. Melky Cabrera, Bartolo Colon and Lance Armstrong have all been dealt their punishments and have undergone the (in my opinion) far more disheartening task of seeing their names wrung through the 24-hour news cycle as cheaters, liars, etc.
Personally, I have no sympathy for any of them, nor do I want to hear the sob story of any other athlete who has been suspended or banned from a sport for his or her use of performance enhancing drugs. For almost a decade, PEDs and the like have been at the forefront of controversies in sport, so the fact that anybody in this day and age would use them and expect to get away with it is just lunacy.
The worst part about all of this is that there are SO MANY better ways to gain an upper hand in competition without running the risk of a big suspension or having your name become synonymous with cheating.
I don’t condone the use of outside influences, mechanisms, or substances to get ahead. PEDs are the last recourse of those who not only can’t cut it in their sport, but who also don’t have the dignity and class to move along as countless others have before them. The same goes for those who use technology to try and gain an edge. While I don’t condone a bounty system in football, at least the Saints were still just playing man vs. man and not using video information obtained illegally to outscheme an opponent. I still can’t wrap my head around the fact that New Orleans is missing out on all kinds of player and coach participation - when all that their scheme would do is give the other team an advantage since the Saints would be too busy trying to target specific players instead of responding to the actual plays – while the Patriots got nothing but fines for blatantly ignoring league rules and warnings while utilizing outside forces to fundamentally alter the way their games were played.
Pardon me if I sound too nostalgic, but whatever happened to the good old days of getting a competitive edge? I’m the most competitive person that I know, but there is no way that I would go as far as some people and teams that have been caught. The rules of many sports are black and white, but people have always been able to find some sort of grey area to get that extra touchdown/home run/bucket. Why risk weeks or months or even years of being a national pariah when there are so many other ways to get ahead that carry far less severe punishments if caught?
That’s right, kids. I’m not insinuating that you shouldn’t try some shady and underhanded way to gain an advantage, I simply posit that you do so in an efficient matter. After all, if you ain’t cheatin’, you ain’t tryin’.
So, for those of you who want to get that last little bit of an edge in your intramural or rec league games (or even little league. Hey, I don’t know who reads this, and you youngsters can never start cheating too early!), here is a list of ways to stay on top of the game without finding yourself answering to the commissioner or hanging around with some guy who insists on holding the cup for you while you pee.
Baseball/Softball
This game has been around forever. For much of its existence, those who don’t follow the game closely have criticized it for being too boring and for having too much down time. There may be some truth to those statements, but for the player that needs to rely on things other than talent to be successful, all of that down time has provided us with plenty of ways to skirt the rules of the game.
One of the most common baseball cheats is to doctor the ball. With the right amount of scuff or foreign substance, even a bad pitcher can look like Cy Young. The trick is that umpires are wise to the old emery board and vasoline routine. Instead, get teammates in on the action. Have your catcher file down the metal hooks that hold down the straps on his leg protectors. He can put a nice cut on the seams with that. Same goes for your infielders. A strange looking ball might convince the ump to come and search your pockets, but he’d never guess that your shortstop is the one with the nail file and has been going to town on the ball whenever it’s thrown around the horn.
If you need more speed, don’t try to mess with the ball. Just throw it from closer to home plate. The opposition would get wise to your game if you did it all of the time, but if you wait until a clutch situation where you need a strikeout, it’s incredibly easy to go undetected as you step a foot or two in front of the rubber while you fire it in.
For those of you who have stopped with the hardball and are now just weekend warriors on the softball diamond, there are still some tricks. Doctoring the ball is even easier here. You won’t strike anyone out, but making a nice gash in the ball will keep teams from leaving the yard on every other pitch. Even better, in my league, the team that is batting must supply their own ball. If they want to buy loaded bats and put pitchers’ lives at risk, they’re going to end the game with a whole lot of useless softballs (MSRP: $5.99 each).
Football
Why risk an international incident by illegally recording opponents’ practices when you can just pick off the plays?
Every team at every level has game tape nowadays. (Fun Fact: I actually got paid $30/week in high school to advance scout opponents for a pee wee football team. People are insane.) For some colleges and most high schools, this game tape is as good as stealing a playbook. Many teams get their plays in via hand signals. They might look complicated, but with 30 minutes of studying the gestures and then comparing it to the resulting play, it’s pretty easy to get an idea of what each sign means. Hire a coach to do nothing but pick off signs, and your defensive coordinator has much less to worry about.
Have you ever played against a running back that you just couldn’t get a hold of? He might have been cheating in order to give you the slip. Game pants are tight and slick to begin with, but giving your jersey and pants a once over with cooking spray will make you that much harder to bring down. Silicon works even better, but it has a smell that can be detected much easier.
On the field, it’s easy to bend the rules to get a big gain. If you’re a receiver and a ball gets overthrown, don’t just get your legs tangled and hope for a flag. Incidental contact is being called all of the time nowadays. Instead, get an arm stuck in the defenders ribs and shoulder pads before going down. The contact will keep everyone’s arms from flying out and making the fall seem accidental. That’s free yardage, people.
If a ball gets loose in a big pile, there are plenty of ways to obtain it even if your aren’t the first one on the scene. Some of you might be reading this around dinnertime, so I’ll just leave it to your imagination. Suffice it to say, the tactics will work. Just make sure you’ve stopped doing whatever you’re doing before the ref digs through the pile far enough to see anything.
The cheat that I’m still waiting to see would involve messing with the radio signal that allows teams to call in plays from the press box. Intercepting the transmission would be too risky and would likely carry a very stiff penalty (and besides, if there are any hand signals going on, you’ve already got your designated windtalker coach to pick things off). Instead, wait for a pivotal point in the game and then cut the power or jam the signal. You don’t have to start an electrical fire or render the headsets useless. You just need 15-20 seconds where the other team can’t communicate and get their plan in place.
Soccer
There really isn’t any need for a guide to cheating in soccer. Last time I checked, flopping to draw cards and penalty kicks accounted for the majority of many teams’ strategies.
On fun trick that I’ve heard though… If you ever find yourself having to stop a penalty kick, you can hack your opponent’s mind. Start screaming “All right! All right! All right!” like you’re trying to pump up yourself and your team. Emphasize the “right” part of it. Studies have shown that if the shooter hears it, he’ll subconsciously decide to go right with his shot more often than not. That’s not even really cheating. That’s winning WITH SCIENCE!
Hockey
This is the sport where the line between stretching the rules and outward violence is at its thinnest. If you don’t want to put someone in the hospital, these can be tricky (If you don’t care about the health of other human beings, you’re going to do great and the Philadelphia Flyers should sign you immediately).
First off, there’s the unique aspect of the semi-legal aspect of fighting in hockey. Connoisseurs of the game maintain that there is an elegant beauty to dropping the gloves or, failing that, there is a point to fighting in that it protects star players.
I call shenanigans. Those theories make valid points, but once you go toe-to-toe with an angry Canadian with a good maple syrup buzz going, all bets are off. You need to avoid dying, and the best way to do that is to hurt the other guy as fast as possible. For that, you’ve got “the stinger”. It’s painfully simple. Just throw a hook, intentionally miss by tucking your fist toward your chest, then catch your opponent on the forehead with the trailing elbow. Physically devastating. Highly unsportsmanlike. Brutally efficient.
If you’re a goalie and you’re sick of taking slap shots off of your face, just go to town on the back of anyone’s leg that gets near you. Refs are going to need to see blood before they whistle a goalie for anything.
At any other position on the ice, save the dramatic overhead stick chop for the more understated jab to the ribs or chin with the butt of your stick.
For any and all other shady tactics, just make sure a teammate is screening whichever official is closest. After all, they’re less padded than you and are perfectly willing to look the other way on your awful, awful tactics if it means that he doesn’t have slap shots and 250 pound forwards crowding his space.
Basketball
I’ve got painfully little experience in this game, so I’m not sure of the best ways to cheat without getting caught. As a 5’7” guy with little vertical leaping ability, you can be sure that I’ll find those tactics if I ever give the game an honest shot.
Instead of my experiences, I’ll refer you to the movie Space Jam. As far as I can tell, MJ and the Looney Toons broke every single rule in the book over the course of the second half, but damned if they didn’t win anyway.
So there you go. All of these tricks are at least borderline illegal and definitely frowned upon. Your opponents will hate you and even your teammates will question your morals.
But the important part is that you’ll be winning, and the punishment for your deeds will be minimal if you get caught.
So you’ll still be playing, which is more that some of those over-the-top cheaters from the last few weeks can say.