Press
- The New York Times
"In 'Faust's Gold,' the first book in English to fully convey the systematic doping of athletes in the former East Germany, Ungerleider makes a ...
- Sports Illustrated
"You may grow faint...but I urge you to endure, to take it all in...for then you will cry out...
- San Francisco Chronicle
"The truth is that what happened in East Germany is a gross exaggeration of what happens in countless gyms across America. Athletes are downing the ...
- Chicago Tribune
"Ungerleider's absorbing work is the first detailed look in English at the doping that allowed a country of 16 million to join the United States and ...
- The New Yorker Magazine
"In a new book about the East German sports establishment, 'Faust's Gold', Ungerleider recounts the moment in 1998 when a former GDR athlete ...
- Los Angeles Times
"The book details the revelations of the legal proceedings against former German Democratic Republic (GDR) coaches, doctors and sports officials ...
- Süddeutsche ZeitungFebruary 2004
Much of the same thinking is echoed by Rene Wenzel and Angus Fraser, the coach and masseur, respectively, of the 1990 US junior cycling team, who are ...
- New York TimesFebruary 2004
As described in the book "Faust's Gold," (St. Martin's Press, 2001) written by an American psychologist, Dr. Steven Ungerleider, Andreas (Krieger ...
- Forbes MagazineFebruary 2004
"We are a culture that loves winning: we love hard hitting NFL players, fast sprinters, record shattering swimmers.We've bought into the notion of ...
- San Jose Mercury NewsFebruary 2004
Conspicuous by their absence in the indictment were the high profile athletes who since October have testified before the grand jury at the San ...
- Washington PostFebruary 12, 2004
The IMG model incorporates the mental development, video work and principles espoused by tennis teacher Nick Bollettieri, the impetus behind the ...
- New York TimesFebruary 4, 2004
“Marion Jones has served as an ambassador for her sport with her graciousness, intelligence and outstanding achievement, said Dr. Steven ...
- Los Angeles TimesFebruary 2004
"Until now, when there is a positive test, they go after the athlete," said Steven Ungerleider, whose book "Faust's Gold" chronicled the state ...
- NEWSWEEKNovember 2003
"If we really wanted to go after it, we'd have undercover sting operations aimed at our elite athletes," one researcher noted. "And that ain't going to ...
- San Jose Mercury NewsNovember 2003
Sport physician, Bob Goldman, asked 198 Olympic level U.S. athletes whether they would be willing to take a banned substance if they were guaranteed ...
- New York TimesNovember 17, 2003
''I think Balco is the tip of the iceberg,'' said Steven Ungerleider, a sports psychologist in Eugene, Ore., and author of ''Faust's Gold,'' which ...
- Los Angeles TimesOctober 2003
"If all this turns out to be true," Dick Pound, head of the Montreal based World Anti Doping Agency, said, "it's even more clear than ever that USATF is ...
- San Jose Mercury NewsOctober 2003
Steven Ungerleider, a research psychologist who wrote the book ``Faust's Gold'' about the East German doping program, said others eagerly accept ...
- Los Angeles TimesSeptember 2003
Sports federations such as USA Track & Field are no longer the lead players
in doping cases involving U.S. athletes. The newly formed U.S. Anti Doping ... - Los Angeles TimesJune 2003
"What we have uncovered appears to be intentional doping of the worst sort," USADA Chief Executive Officer Terry Madden said last month. "This is a ...
- Los Angeles TimesApril 1, 2003
Despite estimates that as many as 10,000 East German athletes were given steroids and other dangerous drugs by the coaches and officials who ...
- Chicago TribuneOctober 25, 2002
"One hopes his death marks the end of an era of state sponsored and implemented doping of athletes, many of whom were not in position to understand what ...
- The New York TimesOctober 23, 2002
"Ewald bridged the gap from the Nazi era, and he brought with him an unfortunate wealth of information about pharmaceuticals and an attitude of ...
- Los Angeles TimesOctober 22, 2002
The IOC has consistently declined to rewrite history to award Babashoff, for instance, the gold medals she would have won if the East Germans had not ...
- New York TimesFebruary 2002
The ruling yesterday raised the question of what results might be changed in the future, and even whether it might be proper to adjust results from the ...
- Dallas Morning NewsNovember 2001
University of Texas graduate Dr. Steven Ungerleider, a sports psychologist and Olympics expert, predicted the Salt Lake City Games will have their ...
- OregonianJuly 2001
The Berlin courtroom still had the fenced enclosure used during the trials of Nazi war criminals, which seemed appropriate to the psychologist ...
- Los Angeles TimesApril 22, 2001
Concern and interest about the Touretski case is not limited to Australia. Dr. Steven Ungerleider, an American psychologist and author, just has ...
- New York TimesJune 20, 2004
The doping scandal in California is unprecedented in United States sports. While initial investigations by federal authorities and a prominent ...
- The New YorkerSeptember 25, 2001
At the age of twelve, Christiane Knacke-Sommer was plucked from a
small town in Saxony to train with the elite SC Dynamo swim club... - Harper Collins
In June 2013, when Lance Armstrong fled his palatial home in Texas, downsizing in the face of multimillion-dollar lawsuits, Juliet Macur was ...
- Gotham Books2006
In the summer of 1998 two of baseball leading sluggers, Mark McGwire and Sammy Sosa, embarked on a race to break Babe Ruth’s single season home run ...
- The OregonianNovember 25, 2002
Major news organizations including The New York Times, Chicago Tribune, and Los Angeles Times offered expanded coverage of the obituary of Manfred ...
- Gotham Books
In Wheelmen they reveal the broader story of how Armstrong and his supporters used money, power, and cutting-edge science to conquer the ...