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Tuesday 14, Jun 2011

  Ban on Kolo Toure highlights confusing drug punishment procedures

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Ban on Kolo Toure highlights confusing drug punishment proceduresThe Manchester City doctor, Jamie Butler, alleged to have authorized Kolo Toure taking diet pills, has been cleared of all blame related to the failed drugs test of the Ivory Coast defender last March.

Toure originally claimed that that doctor sanctioned the supplements he borrowed from his wife in an attempt to lose weight.

From Footballfancast.com:

Unfortunately, the former captain at Eastlands was absent for the team’s first cup triumph in 35 years when his brother, Yaya, converted the only goal in City’s 1-0 win against Stoke in last month’s FA Cup Final. “Before I signed for City I told Kolo I wanted to come to England to play with him and win something together,” said Yaya before the Wembley showpiece. “That won’t happen on Saturday, and that means it will be a hard moment for him, and for me as well.”

The public response to Toure’s misdemeanor was initially empathetic, but a deeper inspection of the player’s intent suggests that he was looking to gain an advantage over his Premiership compatriots by attempting to lose weight in a purportedly unnatural fashion. The extent of his punishment is arguably proportionate to the committed crime, but taking a glance at recent cases of substance abuse in football illustrates a confusing and unpredictable process for punishing those guilty of failing drugs tests.

Toure will have to wait until September 2nd until he can feature again for City having been banned for a total of six months by the Football Association.

Sunday 03, Apr 2011

  Odenwald resigns as UIL director of athletics

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Odenwald resigns as UIL director of athleticsDr. Mark Cousins was recently named as interim director of athletics for the UIL and will be replacing outgoing director Cliff Odenwald, who resigned Dec. 31.

Odenwald worked in the North Texas area as a coach and administrator for 19 years before joining the UIL.

From Dallasnews.com:

“The timing being what it is, we’ve got every sport playing or about to be playing with the exception of football and volleyball,” Breithaupt said. “To post the job right now just wouldn’t be right, timing-wise. Mark knows the inner workings of our athletics department, as does the staff. We’ve got an outstanding athletic staff.”

Odenwald’s tenure at the UIL was marked by several sweeping changes, including a rules compliance program for coaches and central-site championships for all classes in football. He joined the league as an associate athletic director in June 2007, hired to oversee the UIL’s newly created steroid program. He became the league’s director of athletics in February 2009, after Breithaupt vacated the post in order to become the league’s executive director.

Dr. Charles Breithaupt, executive director of the UIL, said the process for finding a replacement for Odenwald will be initiated in mid-March.

Thursday 01, Oct 2009

  Vobora suspended for violation of anti-steroid policy

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Vobora suspended for violation of anti-steroid policyThe StarCaps issue still has not been resolved as of the moment, and yet the National Football League faces another case of their player violating their policy on anabolic steroids, other performance enhancing and related drugs.

David Vobora, linebacker for the St. Louis Rams, has been suspended for four games, according to the league.

According to Marc Lillibridge, Vobora did everything “by the book”. He called the NFL supplement hotline to check the ingredients in his nutritional supplement. He even read the list of ingredients to the employee and he was told that the product was safe. He was confident that none of the product’s ingredients would yield a positive result for drug tests. He eventually began using the product.

Although they have contested the test result, Vobora still faces suspension because according to NFL rules, every player is responsible for his own body and for whatever supplement or substance that he ingests.

Lillibridge and Vobora are currently in the process of filing a case against the manufacturer of the supplement that Vobora took.

Vobora started his football career in NFL as a rookie on July 22, 2008 under the St. Louis Rams. During the 2009 season, he was named as the starting strongside linebacker.

From National Football Post:

While the StarCaps suspensions hang in the balance, the NFL has cracked down on another player for violation of the league’s policy on anabolic steroids and related substances. St. Louis linebacker David Vobora has been suspended for four games, the league announced.

Saturday 11, Apr 2009

  RUMORS CIRCULATE CUSHING AND MATTHEWS ARE ON STEROIDS

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RUMORS CIRCULATE CUSHING AND MATTHEWS ARE ON STEROIDSThe NFLDraftBible.com published a report that Brian Cushing and Clay Matthews were tested positive of steroids and tested positive for marijuana were Boston College’s defensive tackle BJ Raji, Florida’s wide receiver Percy Harvin, and Illinois cornerback Vontae Davis during the NFL combine. But the National Football League released a statement saying that the stories were malicious and ‘self-serving.’ There was no way anyone would know what the results were because they were confidential. The NFL officials did not even know them. Only the players did because the medical supervisors emailed the results to them. The league further said that it was expected that rumors like this would circulate during the annual combine. These reports should be investigated to avoid any embarrassment on the players because being linked to steroids these days is not a joke.

From The USA Today:

A string of denials and admonishments followed the NFLDraftBible.com stories, particularly in defense of the USC linebackers.

USC coach Pete Carroll called the report “absolutely false.” He told the L.A. Times, “This is an [sic] major example of irresponsible reporting, and the site that published this report should be ashamed of themselves.”

Cushing’s agent, Tom Condon refuted the story and called it a “vicious and false rumor.” Matthews’ agent, Mark Humenik, called for NFLDraftBible.com to retract the report, which he called a “grossly irresponsible and unfair accusation.” As of late Sunday, there had been no change in the reporting by NFLDraftBible.com.

Davis’ agent issued a similar denial. “Neither Vontae nor our office has received any notification of any positive test whether for marijuana or any other banned substance,” the agent, Todd France, told the Rockford Register Star.

The yearly combine is a crucial time of the year in which agents and the players try to gain advantage over the other to be drafted in the teams. The reports could be a ploy to discredit those players who were mentioned.

Friday 03, Apr 2009

  Six Honduran players got clean chit in doping scandal

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Six Honduran players got clean chit in doping scandalSix players of Real Juventud, the first division club of Honduran got a clean chit in a doping scandal on Mrach 21. The players were accused by the Honduran Football Federation’s anti-doping commission under the charges of using banned substances.

Dr. Gisel Torres of the commission alleged last month that the Real Juventud players had used medicine that contained steroids. But Mario Garcia, a member of the federation’s disciplinary commission, declared the charges untrue. He said that no evidence of banned substances was found in doping tests.

The news was a big relief for the players and Real Juventud. The club officials said that they knew that the players, Carlos Navarro, Dionisio Mejia, Jose Medina, Jorge Funez, Luis Castro and Ronald Maradiaga were innocent.

From CNN:

Six players with Honduran first-division club Real Juventud were cleared for play after being accused of using banned substances.

Dr. Gisel Torres of the Honduran Football Federation’s anti-doping commission last month alleged the Real Juventud players used medicine that contained steroids.

But Mario Garcia, a member of the federation’s disciplinary commission, said on Saturday that testing found no evidence of banned substances.

Real Juventud welcomed the news, saying it knew that Carlos Navarro, Dionisio Mejia, Jose Medina, Jorge Funez, Luis Castro and Ronald Maradiaga were innocent.

Monday 30, Mar 2009

  STEROIDS USE SHOULD BE ALLOWED IF PROPOSAL TO ADD MORE GAMES TO NFL IS APPROVED

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STEROIDS USE SHOULD BE ALLOWED IF PROPOSAL TO ADD MORE GAMES TO NFL IS APPROVED  Athletes from professional sports like the NFL, NBA, MLB, and the NHL are providing our evening entertainment by playing on the court, on the field, or on the ice. It is reminiscent of the era of the gladiators in the Roman Empire when they are brought into the arena to kill each other. Nothing much has changed today. The NFL jocks, for example, may be consider the gladiators of the 21st century. They are big, muscular, weighing over 200 pounds, loaded with testosterone aggression and when they are out on the field to determined to “kill.”

With the huge following and excitement generated by one season of football and the millions – no, billions – of dollars it makes in revenue, NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell proposed that 1 or 2 more games should be added to the NFL’s regular season. Kevin Van Valkenburg of the Baltimore Sun reacted to the proposal saying that the players should be given the freedom to use steroids, human growth hormones or even marijuana to deal with the pressure that comes with the game.

From The Baltimore Sun:

If the NFLPA does go ahead with Goodell’s proposal, they ought to, at the very least, ask for this concession: If we want to take steroids or human growth hormone to stay healthy, or smoke marijuana for medicinal reasons to deal with the pain, let us.

You might laugh, but that’s the only way to make this proposal work. It’s ridiculous to pretend that drugs aren’t already a major part of life in the NFL. Teams could literally not field a full roster each week without painkillers, legal or otherwise. Marijuana isn’t just a recreational drug for a lot of NFL players, it’s the only way they can get out of bed on Monday mornings. And it’s much less addictive than a painkiller like Vicodin, which is legal.

The NFL boasted that they conduct regular drug test and are able to monitor the use of performance enhancing drugs. But these efforts are useless because to meet the people’s expectations of making every game better than the last and to rake in more income the players would need to use the PEDs or at least some drug for the stress that their bodies and their minds are going through every season.

Monday 09, Mar 2009

  MLB GETS BULLIED OVER STEROID SCANDAL

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mlb-gets-bullied-over-steroid-scandalAnd NFL’s big burly guys don’t get slammed at all when it is so obvious that their quarterbacks reek with PEDs. One would wonder why the media isn’t cutting the Major League Baseball some slack when the NFL is equally guilty of having players on dope.

According to statistics in an anonymous survey 16% offensive linemen and 15% defensive linemen have admitted to using performance enhancing drugs. If the NFL officials rounded up the players that represented the numbers it would cost the sports industry its business.

The nature of both games make the big difference. NFL is a contact sport where you see tackles and muscled creatures wrestling each other on the field. Their use of the steroids seems valid. With baseball, players hardly need the brawn to be able to pitch or bat. The extra muscle could hamper their performance in the game.

From USA Today:

No one is screaming “Kill the pitcher!” in baseball. A much more refined, nuanced game, baseball doesn’t cover its players’ faces (other than the catcher’s), allowing the one-on-one, pitcher-hitter matchup to become a masterpiece played over and over. When the pitcher leans in to get the sign, we can see his eyes narrow. The batter, too, is on display for all to see in a way an NFL player never is, be he the quarterback, the kicker or the return man.

Thus, we feel we know the baseball player better than the football player. It follows that those we know better, we care more about, and perhaps even begin to trust more. So if they cheat, it bothers us more.

“In baseball, it’s one person,” said Michael Yessis, a specialist in athlete training. “In football, it’s the entire line buried in there somewhere. We look at them and judge them very differently.”

NFL at least had tested their players to find out who’s on the “juice.” Major League Baseball had to wait til a big story like Alex Rodriguez leaks out to the press.

Wednesday 04, Feb 2009

  CHANEY REVEALS STEROID USE IN FOOTBALL IN HIS BOOK

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football-steroidsThe use of anabolic steroids in sports has been present for decades and Matt Chaney writes about it in his book, “Spiral of Denial: Muscle Doping in American Football”. Chaney used to be involved in the sport as a player for Southeast Missouri State and as a student assistant coach. He writes that he first experienced steroids when he entered football in school back in 1982. He used one cycle of testosterone which successfully gave him power and mass. Fortunately (or unfortunately for him), he suffered a severe knee injury which cost him his life as a player and also prevented him from using stronger steroids. Chaney was hired soon hired as a student assistant coach where he noticed that several football players were using steroids. Everyone, even the coaches, knew and everyone just kept quiet. There was an unwritten “don’t tell policy”. Chaney ended up as a writer and that was when he started writing about steroid use. According to him, only little can be done to prevent steroid use. Even tests are not enough because there are still many steroids that remain undetectable. It would take too long and too much money to create a test that would be able to detect everything.

From Southeast Missourian:

Chaney said he has proposed — along with others — that the only immediate way to help curb the use of performance enhancing drugs is to put a cap on the weights of players based on their height and body type.

“It’s a terrible problem and there is no solution in terms of the absolute,” he said. “There will never be technology or laws that will stop this. One thing we can do is limit the sizes of the players. It’s not my idea, it’s been around. Right now that’s the only immediate prevention anybody knows.”

Chaney said it’s foolish to think coaches on all levels don’t know what’s going on, but as he mentioned earlier, he does not blame coaches — past and present — for the steroids problem in football. In fact, he doesn’t blame anybody, instead calling it a cultural issue

Chaney points out that you can’t blame the coaches or the athletes since their hands are tied. He said that the problem is the culture. If you don’t use steroids, you won’t be able to play in the sport that you love or at least, most players won’t. Chaney’s book has received an incredible support by the public. This was not his goal however.

“My major point is that this it not an individual problem or a school problem or a team problem,” he said. “My point is this is a general problem that needs to be out there for people to know about.”

Friday 16, Jan 2009

  HIGH SCHOOL ATHLETE SPEAKS UP ABOUT SUPPLEMENT USE

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highschoolfootball-steroidsA local high school athlete revealed a shocking practice in a local varsity football. Apparently, their coaches are promoting the use of legal supplements that allows them to gain more muscle bulk and enhance their performance. These supplements serve as alternative to anabolic steroids and also act as pro hormones.

From Las Vegas Now:

A varsity football player says coaches are encouraging players to turn to quick fix, “What they’ll do is know it’s going on, but they won’t say anything bad about it, like, ‘You should stop that.’ They’ll act like it’s not going on.”

Due to fear from what his team will think, the athlete chose to remain anonymous. The problem is that the entire team, teammates and coaches alike, pressure him to take the supplements are strong. Although the coaches claim that the supplement will do them good, they want everyone to keep it a secret. Everyone knows what’s happening but no one is telling anyone to stop.

A parent who found about this was rather shocked at how their coaches handled things and chose to report this to Nutritionist Michael Konowalski. The later said that the coaches are giving out the wrong message. They are, in fact, promoting a quick fix to improving one’s body. Even if it is not steroid use, these supplements tells the student athletes that it’s okay to use such things—that the end (or rather, the championship) is more important than the means.

Local officials plan to talk to Konowalski in order to make plans on how to address this problem.

Wednesday 31, Dec 2008

  Two more dopers caught before 2008 ends

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urine-test-steroidsSports organizations net two athletes for violation of anti-doping policies.
Soccer player Eduardo Carlos Morgado Oliveira tested positive for the anabolic steroid nandrolone after the Russia-Italy matchup at the FIFA Futbal World Cup Brazil 2008 on Oct.18.

From Web News Wire:

Italian player Eduardo Carlos Morgado Oliveira was suspended for two years after testing positive during a doping control after the match for third place at the FIFA Futbal World Cup Brazil 2008 between Russia and Italy on 18 October.

The substances found were the two major metabolites of the synthetic anabolic steroid nandrolone, which appear on the list of “Prohibited Substances” of the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA). The sanction for such a case is two years and applies for all matches, whether friendly or official fixtures, at domestic and international level, from 6 November 2008, the date on which the player was first provisionally suspended by the chairman of the FIFA Disciplinary Committee.

Meanwhile Liberian player Melvin King received a five-month ban subsequent to a positive test at a doping control after the match of the preliminary competition of the 2010 FIFA World Cup between Senegal and Liberia. The match took place on 21 June 2008. King was discovered of using a glucocorticoid, which is a medication included in the list of specified substances of WADA.

The use of such a substance requires a therapeutic use exemption, something which the player did not have. The sanctions for such an anti-doping rule violation range from a warning to a two-year suspension, and the FIFA Disciplinary Committee decided to impose a sanction of five months starting on 2 October 2008, the date on which the player was first provisionally suspended by the chairman of the FIFA Disciplinary Committee. The sanction applies for all matches, whether friendly or official fixtures, at domestic and international level.

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