The swimming competition at the Tokyo Olympics is officially over. In the post-Sun Yang era, our athletes still achieved excellent results. Especially Zhang Yufei and the handsome man Wang Shun.
Off the field, however, another American swimmer, Murphy, created a very speechless off-court news.

<h1 class="pgc-h-arrow-right" data-track="42" > the king of backstroke</h1>
Ryan Murphy (born 1995) is a star athlete in the U.S. delegation and a former king of backstroke.
At the 2016 Rio Olympic Games, he won two gold medals in the backstroke of 100m and 200m in the individual event, and won the 4*100m medley relay championship with the team.
Because of his handsome appearance and sexy body, he was selected as one of the most anticipated sexy athletes of the American delegation to the Tokyo Olympic Games before the competition.
After the Rio Olympics, with the rise of China's Xu Jiayu and Russia's Evgeny Rylov, Murphy's dominance was gone.
At the 2017 and 2019 World Championships, Murphy was defeated by Xu Jiayu twice in the 100m backstroke and twice by Russia's Relov in the 200m backstroke.
The time has come for the Tokyo Olympics. In Murphy's two individual 100m and 200m backstroke competitions, Xu Jiayu was not in good shape, but Reloff was still brave, beating Murphy twice to win two Olympic gold medals.
Champion Evgeny Rylov
<h1 class="pgc-h-arrow-right" data-track="55" > off-site smoke</h1>
After losing the Olympic games, Murphy did not show the demeanor of a general he deserved, but threw out shocking remarks.
In a post-match interview, Murphy actually said that he had been playing a "maybe unclean" game all year round, which was a huge mental drain on himself.
It is a huge mental drain on me to know throughout the year that I’m swimming in a race that’s probably not clean
Lost Murphy
Murphy said he learned of doping in swimming competitions from "officials in FINA's administration."
“I do believe there is doping in swimming,” Murphy, a 26-year-old American, said. And he said an executive at FINA, the international swimming governing body, had told him as much.
It is worth mentioning that before Murphy and Relov arrived, when the reporter interviewed the bronze medalist Luke Greenbank of The United Kingdom, the player made the following remarks, which also reflected the doping scandal of Russian athletes.
Obviously it's frustrating, as an athlete, having known that there is a state-sponsored doping program going on.
Luke Greenbank
You know, this is a remark made in a post-match interview, and champion Rellov sat next to him.
Tokyo Olympics 200m backstroke post-match press conference
While Murphy didn't directly say what he thought was wrong with Reloff, he didn't say he thought his opponent was "clean."
When the reporter unkindly asked Relov, "Do you think they care about you?" ”
Rylov was immediately asked: “Do you think they’re referring to you?”
Relov, on the other hand, played the characteristics of a fighting nation, and forcefully replied that I had never used stimulants, and had been cooperating with this doping test. From the bottom of my heart, I knew I was clean, and Murphy didn't name me, so I didn't know how to respond.
“I have always been for clean competition,” Rylov said in Russian. “I’m always tested. I’ll fill out all the forms. So from the bottom of my heart, I’m for clean sport. … So I don’t know how to react to that. Ryan didn’t accuse me of anything, therefore I’d rather not react.”
Although Murphy later clarified in the interview that he did not allude to Reloff and congratulated Reloff on winning the championship.
However, we have heard enough of this kind of "polite clarification" after the fact, and the Western media that know how to guide public opinion know how to report.
As an ordinary person, I have no intention or qualification to make any assessment of the "doping" scandal of Russian athletes.
An athlete is able to participate in the Olympics, proving that the athlete is "clean" compliant before the game.
The athlete passed a urine test after the race, and the results were valid, proving that the athlete was "clean" during the competition.
As a healthy person, Relov at least does not have the preferential treatment of "licensed" drugs for retired athletes in certain sports.
Just like an ordinary person who has not been found guilty of a crime, let alone proven guilty, can we also blame the other party without any cover? Rules are rules, and an athlete not only needs to obey, but also needs to respect the authority of the rules. Question the weakness of the other party when you have not benefited from the rules and the other party has not been proven to have violated the rules.
Murphy's "reason to suspect" the other party's cheating, the right to "think what he thinks, say what he thinks", if it is refined to doubt the authority of the Olympic Committee and the results of the inspection. So can Murphy, who also passed the urine test and has a valid score, be suspected of being "unclean"?
Considering the experience of Chinese athletes being blamed, the russian Olympic Committee's response really expressed my thoughts
Understand that it's important to learn to lose[the game], but it's not for everyone.
In this world, all those who work hard deserve respect. What is the difference between using so-called "subjective guessing", "hearing", no evidence, and uninvolved accusations against others, and the current Internet storm and keyboard man.
Of course, Murphy is not a keyboard man, but a "general" who uses language to provoke a keyboard man.
Here's what comes to mind
Although some are ignorant, they are good at summarizing the messy concentration camps
No P chart, no video, not handsome, less loved
I can only code braille, and I implore you to shake your fingers and give a compliment to the attention
Note: Some of the picture sources are online, if there is infringement, I will delete it immediately