
The Enhanced Games has already done enough with its athlete roster to make the Las Vegas event difficult to dismiss as a novelty.
The Enhanced Games roster includes names across track, swimming and weightlifting, which matters because this is not being built around one headline act alone.
Fred Kerley is still the obvious starting point. The American sprinter is listed by Enhanced Games as a track athlete, and his Olympic 100m silver and bronze give the event instant mainstream recognition before its Las Vegas event.
Fred Kerley gives Enhanced Games an obvious headline name

Fred Kerley is the name that changes the conversation most clearly.
The men’s 100m is simple, global and instantly understood. Having a sprinter with Kerley’s Olympic pedigree on the list gives the Enhanced Games a level of recognition most new events cannot buy.
That does not settle the wider debate around the concept. It does, however, make it much harder to frame the whole thing as a fringe project with no serious sporting names attached.
Enhanced Games roster has Olympic names beyond track
The strongest point is that Kerley is not isolated. Swimming gives the roster real depth through Benjamin Proud, James Magnussen, Hunter Armstrong and Cody Miller.
Enhanced Games also lists weightlifters Arley Méndez, Beatriz Pirón and Boady Santavy, along with track names including Emmanuel Matadi, Clarence Munyai, Denae McFarlane and Jasmine Abrams.
That list is the point. Supporters and critics can argue over what the event represents, but the roster already has enough Olympic and world-level credibility to demand attention in Las Vegas.
For a new sporting product, that is the first major battle. The Enhanced Games has not won acceptance, but it has clearly won enough name recognition to be taken seriously.




