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    Default Spiral of Denial author interviewed on doping in football

    Spiral of Denial author interviewed on doping in football
    by Matt Chaney


    Q1. With your knowledge about the game and drugs: How extensive is the use of HGH in the NFL?

    Matt Chaney, Author of Spiral of Denial: I believe use of recombinant hGHis a widespread problem in the NFL, impacting competition. Recently, Tampa Bay Bucs running back Earnest Graham estimated 30 percent of NFL players use growth hormone, while former St. Louis Rams lineman DeMarco Farr estimated about half of
    players use. This week, former Packers lineman Tony Mandarich
    admitted using rhGH and steroids in the NFL, and he said dozens to
    hundreds of doctors are prescribing such drugs to the athletes.
    Retired NFL players have told me a large majority of active players
    use rhGH, at all positions in any given year, and many retirees enjoy
    the drug’s reinvigorating effects long after they’ve left the game
    and anabolic steroids.


    Q2. Why is HGH seemingly popular among athletes (track and field, NHL, NBA, MLB, NFL)?

    Chaney: One reason is the drug’s rapid rejuvenation of depleted muscles, and
    many athletes believe hGH helps restore joints from wear and tear,
    even injury. For size and power, athletes believe androgens,
    testosterone and/or anabolic steroids, are necessary in concert with
    Growth to achieve great gains. The standard, time-trusted drug
    stack for beating urinalysis is hGH and low-dose
    testosterone. The prescription records of numerous Carolina Panthers
    players from 2002 to 2004 corroborate this fact, their receipt of
    PEDs like hGH and testosterone from private physician James Shortt,
    who’s since convicted of criminal drug charges. In track and field
    since 1984, athletes, coaches and gurus have discussed the stack of
    low-dose testosterone and hGH stack for its effectiveness at both
    enhancing performance and evading detection.


    Q3. The NFL does not test for HGH because the players feel that only aurine
    test will expose the use of HGH. Do you agree with that argument (against the blood test)?

    Chaney: I’m currently re-exploring the question of NFL players’ resistance to
    drug testing, which I’ve discussed with athletes and other qualified
    observers for over 20 years. One enduring reason is players do not
    trust management with such a powerful tool, not only for possibly
    revealing foreign substances but also other medical data.
    Contemporary players are very wary of releasing health information
    they consider private, regarding drugs or otherwise. In addition,
    American football players do not trust any sort of testing for
    preventing muscle drugs, steroids, hGH and more, and I don’t blame
    them. Standard urinalysis is proven an utter failure, with gaping
    loopholes and questionable science, yet football players still must
    take part in the charade. They don’t want any more technology added
    to the mix, unless it unequivocally turns back the drug(s) it is
    touted to prevent. The current WADA blood test for rhGH, designed to
    differentiate the dominant GH isoform from its bio-engineered clone,
    apparently is useless for battling abuse in any sport, much less the
    NFL. No drug-savvy football player in America would be so stupid as
    to flunk this test, with its detection window of only hours.
    Moreover, if by chance chopsticks would catch a fly, so to speak, the
    accused athlete and his representatives, ranging from personal agents
    to union officials, would immediately challenge the isoform test in
    court. Some pro football players make more money annually than USADA
    has in its entire operating budget. NFL players would crush the
    GH-isoform test in American trial court. Now, all that said, an
    intriguing development is WADA’s current move toward adding the
    GH-biomarker test to its anti-doping employ. The biomarker, said to
    have a 14-day detection window for outcome substances of GH in the
    bloodstream like the potent enhancer IGF-1, could raise the stakes
    against determined dopers while assuring other players that valid
    prevention is finally in place. However, expert critics denounce
    blood-profiling for anti-doping, including Dutch statistician Klaas
    M. Faber, who ridicules the suspension of German speedskater Claudia
    Pechstein for the adverse analytical finding he says is based on
    invalid data. Pechstein, of course, has never tested positive in a
    direct analysis for doping, and her experience represents the kind of
    prosecution and punishment any person would resist-and especially
    affluent American athletes and their support networks. Blood testing
    must be sound, solid in its science and backed by heavy legal
    resources for meeting the formidable challenges of policing American
    athletes for PEDs; I don’t think it is.


    Q4. For years WADA has criticized the NFL for not doing enough to
    prevent the use of illegal drugs including HGH. Is that a fair
    critique?

    Chaney: I think WADA specializes in public relations, not preventing doping
    and protecting athletes and fair play. Anyone who says WADA has
    successfully battled doping in the Olympics and others sports is
    moronic or, worse, deceitful.. Performances of Olympic athletes
    continue to elevate through the roof, especially for the speed
    factor, with no reasonable explanation other than doping. I trust
    WADA and USADA would accomplish as much against drugs in American
    football, like hGH, as have the NFL and NCAA in almost a
    quarter-century of their anti-doping: Nothing.


    Q5. Some experts feel that the NFL four-game suspensions are laughable
    (like the one Texans linebacker Brian Cushing recently received). Do
    you agree?

    Chaney: I once hoped that policy of testing and punishment could make a
    difference in athletics, root out drugs and protect all athletes. It
    cannot. It only persecutes the few athletes to get caught, among the
    masses who use drugs for competitive gains. I’ve been in the
    athlete’s position, facing the question of whether to use drugs or
    not to compete at high level, and I chose to inject testosterone for
    succeeding in college football, 1982. I’d do the same today in
    American football, much quicker too, since nothing can stop drugs and
    the players have become gigantic attack robots. I refuse to endorse
    punishment of individuals for doping anymore, without valid and
    reliable detection in place, and that is nowhere in sight.


    Q6. How do players react to such suspensions?

    Chaney: It devastates them, from collegiate to professional competitors. They
    know they’ve been singled out, and unfairly. That’s why it is folly
    to add more ineffective testing to American football at this point in
    time. The players won’t stand for it. They will fight back, and in
    the court of law, foregoing the kangaroo arbitration process of sport
    anti-doping.


    Q7. How should the NFL in your opinion try to prevent the use of HGH - if possible?

    Chaney: I’ve virtually given up hope that any technology will ever prevent
    muscle doping in any sport, from steroids to hGH, and elimination is
    out of the question, isn’t it? Experts tell me a fortune is needed
    for research and development to improve the current model of
    anti-doping, probably billions of dollars, with still no guarantee
    for success. That kind of funding is impossible, especially in our
    cash-strapped world. Possible remedies are scant, but for American
    football I espouse immediate reduction of doping and injuries by
    placing size limits on players from preps to pros. Forget testing.
    Football organizations can place restrictions on player sizes, law
    enforcement can probe illicit PEDs in sport and culture, and if
    problems persist, well, then the trial courts of America will kill
    the sport with lawsuits. The choices are clear.

    Matt Chaney is a journalist, editor, teacher and publisher in Missouri. E-mail him at mattchaney@fourwallspublishing.com. For more information about his 2009 book Spiral of Denial: Muscle Doping in American Football, visit the home page at 4wallspublishing.com.
    Motivation is what gets you started. Habit is what keeps you going.

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    this is good article, but still they coloring even HGH as a bad thing. Or i should trying to turn HGH into something reall BAD which is not, and i am not talking about anything else just HGH

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