Did Ancient Greeks Ban All Cheating in Sports?
We think Olympic athletes swore sacred oaths and played fair—no cheating, no bribes. The reality? The Greeks invented doping scandals.

Sebastiano Ricci — "The Baptism of Christ" (ca. 1713–14), public domain
The myth of pure Olympic honor.
Modern textbooks say ancient Greek athletes competed for glory, not gold—no cheating, no shortcuts, just muscle and virtue under the gods’ gaze. The Olympic oath was sacred, punishment harsh. Surely, there were no scandals.
But cheaters raced—and paid.
In reality, bribery, doping (herbal potions), and even match-fixing scarred Greek sports. Offenders paid fines to fund bronze 'Zanes'—statues of Zeus lining the stadium, each with a nameplate of shame. Imagine running past a row of your disgraced predecessors, every four years.
How did this myth start?
Victorian writers loved the idea of ancient purity—a heroic past unsullied by modern corruption. But ancient texts, from Pausanias to Pindar, spill plenty of Olympic tea: not even the gods could stop a good grift.
At Olympia, cheaters paid hefty fines used to erect bronze statues of Zeus—each one inscribed with the offender's name, a warning cast in metal. Ancient sports were no less cutthroat than today.