Penis enlargement with hyaluronic acid, the ingenious method found by athletes to manipulate ski suits in competitions


Article by David Istrate – Published Tuesday, 06 January 2026, 10:45 / Updated Tuesday, 06 January 2026 10:49
A new scandal has erupted in the world of ski jumping, a sport in which the equipment plays a very important role. According to the latest information, some athletes would have used hyaluronic acid to enlarge their penises, so as to ensure a wider and, by implication, more aerodynamic suit in competitions.
Over the past few years, winter sports have been marked by several scandals, many of them related to equipment and the attempt by some athletes to manipulate the equipment in order to have a competitive advantage. For example, several Norwegian athletes, under the supervision of coach Magnus Brevig, they used a sewing machine to manipulate some suits in a hotel room.
Hyaluronic acid and silicone condoms, used by athletes before FIS measurements
Considering the impact that different costumes have in a sport like ski jumping, the International Ski and Snowboard Federation (FIS) has come up with some rules that specify in detail how the costume should be.
A suit that is too loose or too short is advantageous for athletes, from an aerodynamic point of viewso the FIS uses a 3D scanner to measure skiers' limbs and prepare suitable suits for each.
According to the brand, the lowest point of the genital area is used as a reference for the measurements taken, but some athletes have found a way to artificially change this reference point.
Bild found out that a method used is penis enlargement with hyaluronic acid, to obtain a wider suitwhich would give them an aerodynamic advantage.
The same source announced that in the past, when measurements were done manually, not with 3D scanners, some athletes used silicone-filled condoms for the same reason previously mentioned.
“At the moment, no further measurements are planned. However, we are already working on methods to improve this complex problem,” said Matthias Hafele, head of the FIS equipment department, who did not comment on rumors of methods by which athletes try to cheat.
A variant proposed by Hafele is that, in the future, measurements should take more into account the bone structure, not the soft tissues.




