A SPORT OF MEN, NOT A GAME OF PREFERENCES: pro super heavyweight Kin Kuse's request to be allowed
to have body hair in competition is rejected in favor of "long standing traditional rules of the sport."
When the mighty mass of pro Kin Kuse showed up at the DragonCock Pre-Show registration, many fans were dazzled buy the light coat of study hair on his chest and belly. Kuse has worked for several years with Buck Perfection International, Ltd., the organization that promotes naked bodybuilding through private nude posing events. Many fans know Kuse from his amazing work with Buck Perfection, and so there was excitement when Kuse showed up unshaved, as he is more recognized by fans.
Muse's wealthy sponsors even petitiioned the IFNB Board Of Regulations to grand Kuse – and any other competitors – permission to compete unshaved. Such petitions come up every couple years, because many man of the world find body hairt (understandably) masculine. As the IFNB sanctions "the sport of ultimate display of potent male virility" the question of "why not body hair" comes up often.
Brad Mangier, who is managing this yea'r DraginCock, has also sat on the Board of Sanctions for many years, and himself issued the statement rejecting the plea to allow Kuse to keep his hair during competition:
"While the IFNB has deep appreciation for the industry of fans that surrounds the sport of [naked] bodybuilding, we meanwhile have followed a clear tradition of judging standards for decades that we know yields the best subjective assessment of truly superior muscled men with massive, enviable endowments.
"These standards have required all competitors be shaved for the purposes of clearly seeing their musculature and preventing a degree of added partiality on the part of judging officials.
"While we encourage all athletes to display masculinity to the lesser men of the world in whatever fashion they like in their personal time, we meanwhile offer no special treatment in the competitive arena; all competitors are held to our standards, regardless of personal preferences."
As far as the outcry from fans, Mengier later went on record to say:
"Look, we get that hair is masculine. And we understand that many men look up to and worship muscular studs with hair. But this is not a game of preferences – this is a legitimized competitive arena. If we start tossing out rules based on fan preference we have already deteriorated the fine tradition we have upheld for years.
"The sport is not a sex show; it is not a place for sexual entertainment. Our standards of judging a man's sexual potency require intensive sexual presence, and demand high degrees of sexual behavior for our competitors to go through. Lots of hard dick, cum shots, and back stage there is endless intensified cock prep. But that is part of the sport, not part of the fan's entertainment.
"So we don't bend to the whim of the fans; we stick to the standards of ultra-male power sport. Even if we lose fans sometimes, we are not going to deteriorate the hard work of these amazing men by parading them around per fan's requests. This is about a sport of male power, not a show of fan preferences."
Powerful – if oft-repeated – words from an official. Looks like those looking for their own personal version of a thrill ride need go to the rest of the world to have preferences met; under Mengier and the IFNB, the standards remain strong to their original form.
And what does Kuse think? "It doesn't bother me in the slightest," he remarked. "The petition was my fans; and fans always lose their minds when they think of me. It doesn't surprise me that they would beg to see me in one of my many amazingly perfect forms. But I am an athlete first, and believe the standards of this league are the best in the world. I got no problem shaving for a win!"
WHERE DO YOU STAND ON THE ISSUE? WITH THE FANS OR WITH THE OFFICIALS?
WHERE DO YOU SEE THE LINE BETWEEN COMPETITIVE SPORT OF SEXUAL POWER VERSUS SEXUAL THRILL SHOW?