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May 25, 2026 — Greek swimmer Kristian Gkolomeev produced the lone headline moment at the inaugural Enhanced Games in Las Vegas, posting a 50m freestyle time of 20.81 seconds that was faster than the official world record of 20.88.
Organisers rewarded him with a $250,000 event prize and a $1 million ‘world record’ bonus; Enhanced’s pay-outs and use of polyurethane ‘supersuits’ and performance-enhancing substances mean results will not be ratified by World Aquatics, the IOC or WADA. The one-day, invite-only spectacle staged in a purpose-built arena featured 42 athletes across swimming, athletics and weightlifting, with reporting suggesting around three dozen competitors took part in an organised clinical programme of banned substances under medical supervision.
Clean athletes also triumphed: US sprinter Fred Kerley won the 100m (9.97) and Hunter Armstrong won the 50m backstroke.
Investors linked to the project include high-profile US backers, and organisers contend FDA-approved drugs and medical oversight reduce harm.
Sporting authorities have denounced the event and warned participants they risk bans and health consequences; medical experts raised long-term safety concerns.
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Key takeaways: the Limited record-setting at the Enhanced Games likely reflects the participant pool and equipment/venue factors more than proving PEDs ineffective. Long-term anti-doping measures and career risks make top athletes unlikely to compete, limiting the event’s ability to routinely produce comparable world records.
🕰️ The Story So Far: An Evolving Timeline
Tuesday, May 26, 2026 02:14 UTC
Gkolomeev 'breaks' record at Enhanced Games
Saturday, May 23, 2026 08:24 UTC
Kerley to compete clean at Enhanced Games
Saturday, May 23, 2026 24:43 UTC
Gkolomeev's disputed 50m 'record' at Enhanced Games






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