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Wednesday 08, Apr 2009

  THE UNION CHIEF AND HIS SIDEKICK ORZA MUST GO

Posted Byi steroids

THE UNION CHIEF AND HIS SIDEKICK ORZA MUST GOThere is an outcry to oust Fehr as the union chief and replace him with someone who cares for the welfare of the players and baseball. As he is booted out of the office, his sidekick Gene Orza should follow suit. His arrogance is not doing the Major League any good. He was cornered at a Mets game last month and asked by the media to comment on the state of baseball and what he plans to do about it he evades the questions with a refusal to answer. This speaks a lot about how much he cares about the union. The steroids controversy has placed him in hot waters because of all people in the MLB he should have been the one to know that the players had been doping.

There had been suggestions on who should replace Fehr as the union chief. One is Hank Aaron who had an exemplary performance during his baseball career.

From The Daily News:

Even if he were only a figurehead who would surround himself with lawyers and accountants, baseball needs people like Aaron to let fans trust the game again.

He would be a logical replacement as commissioner as well, except Aaron would have the most to gain by striking Barry Bonds from the record books and re-establishing himself as baseball’s home run king. Better to let someone else make that call.

Therefore, let us do the next best thing and put Aaron in charge of rebuilding the tattered image of the union.

Orza is responsible for the mess why Alex Rodriguez’s results leaked to the press. When the random drug testing was done the MLB players were promised that the evidence would be destroyed but not soon enough for the media to get hold of them. Now the FBI is going to subpoena the results and more names are going to come out. Could this be the end of for some of the players’ careers?

Marvin Miller, the former executive director of the MLB, said that they should not have submitted to the drug testing. This simply means that the union does not care what the Congress thinks, leadership is not going to change, and they had not feeling of regret or remorse.

Friday 14, Nov 2008

  MLB not ready for HGH testing

Posted Byi steroids

MLB-steroidsAt the Growth Hormone Summit held November 10 at the Beverly Hills Hotel and Bungalows, anti-doping experts discussed two of the most contentious issues concerning exogenous human growth hormone.

First, its efficacy. Second, the accuracy of its testing. And since after the daylong conference no consensus was reached by the attendees on both issues, Major League Baseball decided to forego its testing for this controversial compound.

“Growth hormone is widely abused by athletes,” Richard Holt, a professor at University of Southampton in Great Britain said. “There is little scientific evidence that growth hormone is performance-enhancing. I think the scientists are wrong and the athletes are right.”

The professor said that by itself hGH does not do much – athletes have to take other performance-enhancing drugs along with hGH to improve their abilities.

“In order to get the full benefit of growth hormone, you need to take it with other agents as well,” he said.

Even anti-doping czar Don Catlin is in the dark regarding hGH’s affect on the performance.
“There is no answer and I don’t think there will be unless somebody gets approval to do the study. It’s the same thing with anabolic steroids 25 or 30 years ago. We need the same study with HGH,” Catlin said.

Catlin, who is the director of Anti-Doping Research at the UCLA, acknowledged the need to come up with an effective testing method, even if it means soliciting government support.

“The government needs to come in. I don’t like it, but I don’t like X-ray machines at the airport, either. There really isn’t much choice. We’re trying to find a needle in a haystack. There’s good hope.”

As far as the period to accurately test for hGH the timeline is quite narrow.

“Thirty hours, I’d say,” said Douglas Rollins, executive director of the Sports Medicine Research and Testing Laboratory in Salt Lake City.

Other resource persons were of the opinion the timeline can still be narrower.

Bob DuPuy, MLB’s president and chief operating officer, was well aware of the challenge hGH presents, and overcoming that challenge by coming up with such conference is a positive indication that his organization is willing to clean up the sport.

“The commissioner (Bud Selig) is committed to eradicating all performance-enhancing drugs, including HGH,” DuPuy said. “One of the things we’ve recognized from the start of this is HGH presents challenges. One of the purposes for this conference is to get everybody on the same page. All we can do is continue to fund things like this.

“I think we’re doing the best we can do. You’ve got most of the leading experts in the field here today, and that’s a good start.”

Gene Orza, the No. 2 official of the players’ union, said if there’s a scientifically valid test for HGH, the association could go for it. However, for the meantime, they’re not giving the green light.

“My suspicion is they would adopt it, but they wouldn’t be railroaded into doing so,” he said. “Today’s conference suggests a lot of hard work is being done by a lot of qualified people, but there’s a long way to go. No one should have complete faith in a test that has never tested anyone positive.

“We don’t oppose blood testing. We say we’ll consider blood testing, which is different from urine testing. We’re saying we’ll consider blood testing when the time is right. Now is not that time. The players’ association is contributing now to the development and analysis of HGH testing. That’s part of this conference.”

The conference, titled “Growth Hormone: Barriers to Implementation of hGH Testing in Sports”, was co-funded by the MLB with David Geffen School of Medicine of UCLA and Foley and Lardner LLP. Among the summit’s aims was to “identify the scientific, medical, legal, and ethical issues that must be addressed before hGH testing is considered a routine part of sports drug testing.”