Mar

1

Assertions by Major League Baseball that there is no reliable test for human growth hormone may have been reduced to a myth Monday.

Anti-doping agency officials on both sides of the Atlantic touted the case of a British rugby player as proof that HGH can be detected through blood testing. Terry Newton, who was tested in November, did not contest the result and was banned from the sport for two years by the United Kingdom Anti-Doping Agency, The Times of London reported. His rugby club has voided the remainder of Newton’s two-year contract. Newton is believed to be the first pro athlete tripped up by a blood test aimed at detecting HGH, which baseball has banned since 2005 but has not been the subject of testing. The latest development was lauded by Travis Tygart, chief executive of the United States Anti-Doping Agency.

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Feb

24

WHISTLER, British Columbia — On Monday, British rugby player Terry Newton made sports history with the announcement that he had become the first athlete to test positive for human growth hormone. Newton’s positive test came in November, and he has been banned from rugby for two years by the United Kingdom Anti-Doping Agency.

Prior to Newton’s positive test, approximately 900 HGH tests had been conducted over three Olympics — roughly 100 in Turin, 300 in Athens and 500 in Beijing — with no positives. Newton’s result appears to lend some credence to arguments that HGH testing has evolved to the point of being worth conducting. That argument took center stage a little more than two years ago when MLB commissioner Bud Selig told the Congressional Committee on Oversight and Government Reform that he would support testing for HGH in baseball “when a valid, commercially available and practical test for HGH becomes reality, regardless of whether the test is based on blood or urine.”

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Feb

18

A former professional cyclist who served a two-year suspension for doping pleaded guilty in federal court Wednesday to conspiracy to distribute two performance-enhancing drugs.

Joe Papp, 34, of Bethel Park, was selling human growth hormone (HGH) and another drug, erythropoietin, known as EPO, online. He will be sentenced by Chief U.S. District Judge Gary L. Lancaster on June 25. Mr. Papp could face an advisory sentencing range of 10 to 16 months in prison. He pleaded guilty to two counts of conspiracy for selling the substances between September 2006 and September 2007. During that time, Mr. Papp sold about $80,000 worth of drugs to approximately 187 customers.

 

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Feb

15

Olympics & HGH

February 15, 2010 | Leave a Comment

With the Olympics upon, in case you already didn’t know from the bombardment of commercials on an hourly basis, you knew it was going to be a matter of time before someone or some 30 people were going to be nailed for cheating.
It has happened, and WADA President John Fahey is claiming that testing has improved.
Not so fast.

Has the testing improved in all areas of sports, professional and amateur? Yes it has. Have they caught all of the cheats in every sport? Not a chance.
We have seen this before. The number of cheats caught before the games in Beijing…70. Number caught before Vancouver…30. I see a couple of problems with the logic showing the testing is working. One was obvious, different athletes, different sports, different games. If they were comparing numbers from Turin to Vancouver, then I see the logical comparison.
The other is the same argument that I’ve had with a bunch of people for the last little while.
The cheaters are always somehow going to be ahead of the testing. There are always someone going to be working in a lab trying to find the way to get around the testing. It happens all the time.
Baseball had their steroid problem. MLB started testing for steroids, the ball players went to new and innovative stuff like the cream, the clear, and HGH.
You take away one avenue, someone is going to find another way to their goal.
The Olympics and all sports can throw out all the rules they want and test for everything, as long as there is motivation to win, someone will be willing to take that extra step.

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Feb

12

Many runners (myself included) finish their long run or workout and immediately move on to the day’s next task: showering, work emails, getting the kids off to school, etc. But if you aren’t taking the proper post-run recovery steps, you could be limiting your progress.

On days when I race or run hard, I sometimes feel ready for bed at 7:30pm! While this early bedtime makes me feel a bit like a grandma, I listen to my body and give it the extra rest it needs. The human growth hormone (HGH) is essential in repairing muscles and soft tissues broken down by training. However, when deep sleep is absent or interrupted, HGH levels decrease, prolonging recovery from exercise. A few years ago, a study published in the clinical journal Sleep indicated marked delays in muscle recovery by subjects that were prevented from accruing 90 minutes of continuous (deep) sleep.

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Feb

10

On this day 47 years ago, Leonard Kyle Dykstra was born in this world as part of a prodigy science experiment that tested the affects of tobacco dribble on an in vitro fertilization.  Today, he’s the subject of countless quips about his financial shortcomings.

One thing that remains is that in 2005, Dykstra’s ex-business partner alleged that Dykstra took steroids and HGH throughout the course of his career. We may never know…..

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Feb

5

The 43-year-old man says he feels 25. This is no small thing. David Segui was a major-league baseball player at 25, and a good one, making more than $40 million in what would become a 15-year career. So 25 was pretty good.

There’s another reason this is no small thing. It’s what he went through between 25 and 43. Too much of his 30s were miserable, with knees that felt full of rust and knives when he walked. Stairs were impossible. If he dropped something, it stayed dropped. Bending down took too much effort. Ten years ago, when the pain was the worst, doctors found no cartilage in his knees. Just bone on bone, they told him, and those knees needed to be replaced. “That didn’t sound too fun,” says Segui. “I thought, ‘How about I get on drugs?’ “So he did, adding human growth hormone to the steroids he had taken on and off from 1994 to the end of his career in 2004. He still injects HGH every day by prescription — one of baseball’s first admitted performance-enhancing drug users continuing through retirement — and there’s obvious pride when he says his doctor calls him “my healthiest patient.”

Segui is a marvel of modern science, with workouts that last up to four hours a day, all fueled by a synthetic drug banned by all major sports leagues. There are sprints and core work at his home in Johnson County, Kan., weights at the gym, and he laughs at how — before the drugs — he couldn’t walk to the kitchen without pain. He is also, perhaps, the future of how the rest of us view what are now illegal and labeled “performance-enhancing drugs.” If they work this well, and can be used legally with a prescription, experts say it’s a matter of time before our attitudes about them shift.

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Jan

21

“(McGwire) says, ‘Well, (the use of PEDs) doesn’t help eye-and-hand coordination.’ Well, of course it does. It allows you more acuity physically and mentally and optically. You are going to be stronger and you are going to be better,” Hall of Fame catcher Carlton Fisk told the Chicago Tribune.

“There’s a reason they call it performance-enhancing drugs. That’s what it does - performance enhancement,” Fisk told the paper. “You can be good, but it’s going to make you better. You can be average, but it is going to make you good. If you are below average, it is going to make you average. Some guys who went that route got their five-year, $35 million contracts and now are off into the sunset somewhere. Because once they can’t use (steroids and HGH) anymore, they can’t play anymore. And steroids, during that time, probably did as much to escalate players’ salaries as did free agency, as did arbitration, and all of that stuff.”

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Jan

14

It used to be that when you said the words “gym,” “workout,” and especially “weight room,” you could practically sniff the testosterone in the air.

And the mental picture? Beads of masculine sweat dropping onto filthy mats and the kind of tight muscle tees that only people on HGH favor today. That was then (the dark ages) and this is now. When it comes to specific fitness activities, today women frequently outnumber men. Women are more likely than men to engage in fitness activities for at least 100 days per year, and many of them are doing it at women’s-only fitness clubs. And professionally, women continue to gain high-profile access to traditionally male sports, as when women’s boxing was added to the 2012 Olympic Games this past August.

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Jan

12

The strategy that Mark McGwire used Monday to lay out his admission to using steroids demonstrated that lessons were learned from other baseball stars who preceded him in making mea culpa about their drug use.

McGwire had been silent since his embarrassing refusal to discuss his steroid use during a Congressional hearing nearly five years ago. His strategy back then, concocted with avoiding prosecution on his mind, made him appear hapless and as guilty as if he had confessed. This time, McGwire and his handlers surely knew his credibility would be enhanced if he confessed before spring training and made himself widely available, not only on Monday but Tuesday. An interview with ESPN is to be scheduled, but because it’s not exclusive, its thunder will be muted. McGwire’s personality has usually been low key, and he has not always been comfortable with the news media. In his repeated confessions Monday, he had no defiance or anger, just sadness and tears.

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