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Re: Drug cheats

Posted: Thu Feb 07, 2013 6:00 pm
by butt monkey
weststand-rich wrote:
jolleymike wrote:Just been listening to on the BBC news Chanel, how far reaching does the lance Armstrong type of investigation go.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-21363549

The NRL is mentioned in this with a whole team being involved in one way or another, scary just hope the allegations don't reach to teams over in the SL
For peptide hormones read hGH - and it's just as bad over here as over there. Just look around the superleague at the number of players who are exhibiting symptoms of giantism with malformed eyebrow ridges and overly large chins and hands. Frightening.
I know, This Wire forward frightens the bejesus out of me

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Re: Drug cheats

Posted: Fri Feb 08, 2013 10:43 am
by DaveO
TWO EYED WARRIOR wrote:Sky sports news have just shown there report. The nrl has set up an integrity unit to help with the investigations into widespread use of performance enhancing drugs.

The implications for the NRL are huge, watch how this unfolds over the coming days and weeks
The implications for SL are huge as well. Not because we have the same problem (not idea if we do or don't) but where do you think they are going to come looking to replenish their depleted playing rosters if lots of bans are dished out?

I would hope the Aussie government was very strict on visa's and would grant very view telling the NRL clubs to employ the locals from the country clubs. After all those players would have been effectively denied a career by drug cheats anyway.

Re: Drug cheats

Posted: Fri Feb 08, 2013 11:09 am
by Kittwazzer
DaveO wrote:
TWO EYED WARRIOR wrote:Sky sports news have just shown there report. The nrl has set up an integrity unit to help with the investigations into widespread use of performance enhancing drugs.

The implications for the NRL are huge, watch how this unfolds over the coming days and weeks
The implications for SL are huge as well. Not because we have the same problem (not idea if we do or don't) but where do you think they are going to come looking to replenish their depleted playing rosters if lots of bans are dished out?

I would hope the Aussie government was very strict on visa's and would grant very view telling the NRL clubs to employ the locals from the country clubs. After all those players would have been effectively denied a career by drug cheats anyway.
Rogues Gallery made the same point on RedVee. He also asked whether a widespread drugs scandal would force sponsors and advertisers to withdraw their support leaving 'clean' NRL players to seek their fortunes elsewhere?

Re: Drug cheats

Posted: Fri Feb 08, 2013 5:23 pm
by DaveO
Kittwazzer wrote:
DaveO wrote:
TWO EYED WARRIOR wrote:Sky sports news have just shown there report. The nrl has set up an integrity unit to help with the investigations into widespread use of performance enhancing drugs.

The implications for the NRL are huge, watch how this unfolds over the coming days and weeks
The implications for SL are huge as well. Not because we have the same problem (not idea if we do or don't) but where do you think they are going to come looking to replenish their depleted playing rosters if lots of bans are dished out?

I would hope the Aussie government was very strict on visa's and would grant very view telling the NRL clubs to employ the locals from the country clubs. After all those players would have been effectively denied a career by drug cheats anyway.
Rogues Gallery made the same point on RedVee. He also asked whether a widespread drugs scandal would force sponsors and advertisers to withdraw their support leaving 'clean' NRL players to seek their fortunes elsewhere?
He has been reading my posts on rlfans then. I made the point over there that the NRL may not be such an attractive place to go if sponsors leave it and also if they lose lots of top players. After all part of the attraction of going is to play in the top quality league that it is but if it loses many of its top players that won't apply.

Re: Drug cheats

Posted: Fri Feb 08, 2013 10:32 pm
by weststand-rich
slimshady wrote:
weststand-rich wrote:
jolleymike wrote:Just been listening to on the BBC news Chanel, how far reaching does the lance Armstrong type of investigation go.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-21363549

The NRL is mentioned in this with a whole team being involved in one way or another, scary just hope the allegations don't reach to teams over in the SL
For peptide hormones read hGH - and it's just as bad over here as over there. Just look around the superleague at the number of players who are exhibiting symptoms of giantism with malformed eyebrow ridges and overly large chins and hands. Frightening.

The test that caught Terry Newton is highly sensitive, but needs to be administered literally within hours of taking the drug, so it's no real deterrant.
Always thought Sinfield had a large eyebrow ridge!
Mmm. Yes. He does.


Re: Drug cheats

Posted: Sat Feb 09, 2013 11:03 am
by slimshady
weststand-rich wrote:
slimshady wrote:
weststand-rich wrote: For peptide hormones read hGH - and it's just as bad over here as over there. Just look around the superleague at the number of players who are exhibiting symptoms of giantism with malformed eyebrow ridges and overly large chins and hands. Frightening.

The test that caught Terry Newton is highly sensitive, but needs to be administered literally within hours of taking the drug, so it's no real deterrant.
Always thought Sinfield had a large eyebrow ridge!
Mmm. Yes. He does.

And check out his jaw line from when he was younger!

Re: Drug cheats

Posted: Thu Feb 14, 2013 9:25 am
by josie andrews
Six Australian rugby league clubs investigated following drugs report

Anti-doping officials have met with six top-flight Australian rugby league clubs over the use of banned performance-enhancing drugs.
The Australian Sports Anti-Doping Agency (ASADA) spoke to Manly, Cronulla, Newcastle, Penrith, North Queensland and Canberra.

The six clubs revealed they were under scrutiny following a report into the use of drugs published last week.
The year-long investigation also implicated two Australian Rules teams.

"Sports would be foolish to think that they didn't need to take the integrity of their sport seriously," said sports minister Kate Lundy.

"Australia loves sport and hates cheats, and these allegations offend a strong, ingrained sense of fair play. Australians like winning for sure, but not at all costs. In Aussie Rules, one of the country's most popular sporting codes, players with disciplinary infringements are not even considered for the game's highest honour, the Brownlow Medal. And that's the way fans like it."

"The substance of the issue here is that we do have a fight on our hands. It's a serious one.

"Australians take their sport extremely seriously and as sport minister I will not stand by to allow this kind of thing to go on in Australian sport unchecked."

The Australian Crime Commission (ACC) report said it had found "widespread" use of banned performance-enhancing drugs among professional and amateur athletes which also had links to gambling and organised crime.

In light of the findings, all Australian athletes and officials will be forced to sign a legal document regarding their anti-doping history before they can be eligible for next year's Winter Games in Sochi.

Athletes, coaches and officials must declare in the legal document that they have no history of doping, or that they have committed a doping violation and served a sanction.
Anyone who cannot answer yes to either options will be ineligible for selection in the Australia team.

Under Australian law, anyone who wilfully makes a false statutory declaration could face up to five years in prison.

The report said scientists, coaches and support staff were all involved in the provision of drugs across multiple sporting codes, without naming any individuals.
The Melbourne-based Essendon Bombers, one of the country's oldest and most popular Australian Rules clubs, are one of those clubs implicated.

Governing body, the Australian Football League, declined to name the second Australian Rules club in the probe but has confirmed one of its players is under suspicion.
National Rugby League chief executive David Smith said his administration had been working with ASADA for a "number of weeks".

"I can't comment on the outcome on the information we have so far. What I can say is that they're serious matters," he said.

"I have said right from the outset that it involved multiple clubs and multiple players and as a sport we have taken this very seriously in the way we have approached this."

http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/rugby-league/21426476?

Re: Drug cheats

Posted: Thu Feb 14, 2013 11:12 am
by DaveO
This isn't good. It's going to be very interesting to see which players are found out. Will they be the top stars or lesser lights trying to up their game to compete? That sort of thing.