This is a nice idea until you think about the fact that bodybuilding is the only sport where professional athletes consistently die younger than their non-athlete peers, often considerably so. Steroids are not fun get big muscle candy, they thoroughly wreck your body and then you die.
Olympian competitors using PEDs aren't running around on vast amounts of aromatase inhibitors and diuretics to completely eliminate all water from their bodies - this is practically standard in pro bodybuilding.
Powerlifters don't die nearly as frequently and it's largely because aesthetic dryness isn't required.
Olympians also aren't explicitly trying to obtain mass as a goal and wouldn't customarily be walking around at 5'10"/300lbs (for instance - extrapolate) as a bodybuilder might in their off-season. Excess mass is usually detrimental in most Olympic sports and is avoided.
Being medically obese, regardless of body composition, is tough on the human heart - add in extreme/forced dehydration, stimulants, and possibly recreational drugs, and you have a recipe for early expiration.
Folks who would participate embrace the "live hard, die young" mantra. We love folks who do this in our society. James Dean is still the coolest man who ever lived, and a significant reason for that is that he joined the 27 club in a car crash.