Richard McLaren is a law professor at Western University in Ontario, Canada. He has led several high-profile investigations into corruption in sport, including a 2016 report?that detailed how more than 1,000 Russian athletes had benefited from doping thanks to state-sponsored cover-ups, and has undertaken inquiries into doping in US baseball and athletics. His latest report lifted the lid on fight rigging by corrupt boxing officials at the Rio Olympics in 2016.
Where and when were you born?
Toronto in 1945.
How has this shaped you?
My father returned from the Second World War and we settled in a nearby industrial city called Hamilton. Many people from Europe displaced by the war had relocated there to work in the steel mills and heavy industry where you didn’t need to speak much English, so most of my friends were not born in Canada. I grew up among Italians, French and Germans, refugees whose families had seen the horrors of war, so at a very early stage of life, I learned about the divergence of nationalities, which has served me well in the international work I do now.
What type of an undergraduate were you?
I barely graduated high school as I wasn’t very interested in my studies and instead played every sport I could. At university, when I did not make a particular football team, it made me adjust my approach to study. But I wasn’t much interested in the business world [having studied business] so I went and did a law degree at what is now Western University.
Why did you do a master’s at the London School of Economics?
I was frustrated by my law school curriculum, which didn’t focus on international law or the United Nations, which, because of my upbringing in Hamilton, interested me. I was doing well in my studies and won a government scholarship to go to the LSE. After that, I was about to take a job in Geneva at the Civil Aviation Authority when my old university in Canada offered me a teaching position.
Having taught at the LSE and Oxford, and worked in Canadian hockey, you came to prominence as a sports arbitrator at the 2000 Sydney Olympics when you investigated drug use by US track athletes, including the triple-gold-winning sprinter Marion Jones. Do you ever feel sorry for athletes involved in these controversies, even the guilty ones?
That episode began because Jones’ then-husband, C.?J. Hunter [a shot-putter who tested positive for steroids], appeared pitchside with coaching credentials and there was a huge outcry. The US and international committees wanted it off the front pages so decided to establish an inquiry. I was alongside Marion Jones at a highly emotional press conference, which was more about her husband’s presence at the Olympics, and I was emotionally affected. After those Olympics I became a lot less sympathetic to athletes because it is cheating and unfair to other competitors, though that doesn’t mean I don’t feel sorry for those making bad decisions.
You’ve exposed some murky dealings in your boxing corruption and Russia inquiries. Do you ever fear for your safety when investigating?
We were definitely careful about where we went and what we were doing, and our communications are always encrypted – we know there is some risk to what we do, but it is important that people know the things we find. I’m fortunate to have the skills and the team to discover things, and people know I will report what I find without covering anything up or whitewashing.
Are you ever shocked by some of the wrongdoing you’ve uncovered?
I am not easily shocked and, as I’ve become older, I’m more immune to the circumstances I find. What puzzles me more is what makes people do these things. I find it surprising that clever people can do things that are clearly wrong but have rationalised why they’re doing them.
Doping and corruption scandals seem more frequent than ever. Will sport ever be clean?
The roots of this problem go back to the early days of?modern sport, the early 1890s, when athletes were generally from the upper classes in wealthy countries, and everything was run on a volunteer basis. Sport is entirely different now, but governance systems that run sport have been slow to change. You also have referees and judges from different parts of the world whose sports give them the opportunity to fly around the world, something their day job would not give them, so we need to make some of these volunteer positions into paid jobs. Finally, businesses and charities will have someone that regulates them, offers a degree of oversight and an obligation to put everything into the public domain – many sports don’t have that. Instead, it’s usually friends, competitors or those?who love the sport involved with tournaments, though this is starting to change.
Tell us about someone you admire.
I worked alongside US Senator George J. Mitchell for our investigation into Major League Baseball. We would go to lunch and he’d explain how he handled the Northern Ireland peace negotiations and how it was comparable with baseball. He thought we should draw a curtain over the past and start again and I thought we should punish those who had offended. I now see he was right.
Do you still enjoy watching sport despite the corruption you’ve documented?
My children would say that I see corruption and doping everywhere, and my reaction is sometimes sceptical. But even if it’s a sport I’m involved with, such as tennis, it still does not change my enjoyment of a contest. When I watched the US Open final between Emma Raducanu and Leylah Fernandez, from Canada, I found myself cheering hard for Fernandez.
jack.grove@timeshighereducation.com
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