Problem
Look around you. Can you see or think of anything you use to help you do something better? Easier? Faster? The working world is full of gadgets, ideas, and even foods to help workers be faster, more efficient, thus making them better workers and eventually resulting in bringing in more money for their respective companies.
Now can you think of who the employees are of the Toronto Blue Jays? Ottawa Senators? Or even the London Lightning of the Canadian Basketball League? If you listed any of the players on any of the teams, then you have just uncovered an interesting issue: Why are professional athletes treated differently than the majority of the work force when it comes to doing whatever it takes to be the best "employee" they physically can be?
Answer (in paragraphs form of discussion)
Should it matter if an athlete is a professional or amateur when it comes to getting their body to perform the best it can regardless of how they achieve it?