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Here are posterous posts filed under steroids...

timsheldon says...

Lately, I have really been noticing what kind of spot we are in as a nation.  In my opinion, we are in a terrible spot.  I don't even know where to start.  Well I guess I could start with out values, or the lack thereof.  My grandfather once told me that, when a nation collapses, take the Roman Empire, it is because of two things.  1. The nation loses value of its dollar. 2.  The nation loses its morals or values.  We are losing our morals and values faster than I can write this blog, and our money is worth less than Canada, Yikes!!  So you do that math and tell me what lies ahead for us in the future if we don't make a change as a nation.

The reason of my rant today, is mostly how, also in my opinion, professional athletes have become somewhat of a joke. In the past year we have seen such stories as one athlete who electroshocked and killed many dogs, or another who shot himself in the leg at a night club.  Recently, we have encountered Tiger Woods' incident, the number 1 golfer in the world, where he crashed head-on into a tree practically in his front yard, causing $8000 in damage to his car, and is now being accused of having affairs with every girl in L.A.  Now I have hung out with some wild dudes in my day, but none managed do accomplish that one.  Smooth Tiger.  All these people I just talked about are world known athletes looked up to my millions all over the world, including many children.  Hmm.  Now I from a small town, but the married guy who is screwing every gal in town, is a bad guy, but we still seems to love all these guys I listed above, doesn't make sense.  It's like they go to jail for 2 years and are praised more when they are allowed back into the NFL, which is a whole other rant. ha

Then there is the steroids in baseball.  This one really pisses me off, not so much that certain players have been caught using them because I believe at one time steroids were in every clubhouse around the MLB.  The thing that really gets me is how they sit and lie about it until the grave when the whole world knows that they did.  A-rod, in my mind is not someone to be idolized, I want to get that off my chest.  He is a liar, a cheater, just a all around bad dude in my mind.  But we idolize him for some reasons I don't know, oh I guess he's a really good baseball player, and some gals think he has a cute butt.  So forget that he has used steroids damn near his whole career and then lied about it on national television to our faces, or that he was accused of tipping pitches to opponents.  For those who don't know, that means he was standing on second base letting the other teams hitter know what pitches were coming.  He wanted the other teams to catch up so he could have another chance to get up and hit a home run.  Who cares right?  He's a Yankee.

I think we as people have to really look at who we are choosing to be our role models before just putting them on a pedistal.  It is not just athletes, there is a lot of wierdness going on right now in the world of fame.  It is hard to write about, because I want to just go into every single story and pound my point in that some of these people should not be looked up to like they are, but it would take forever.  I don't want to trash all athletes or anything like that, most of them are in fact good people, who are proud to be an elite like they are, and they act like it.  But a few bad apples give a lot of them a bad name.

I understand shit happens, there are so many times I can recall doing something stupid that I should not have.  Who hasn't ?  But I do believe if you are man enough to make it to the spotlight and get yourself into a bad position by acting childish, you better be a man and admit it.  It makes me respect them so much less when they lie, and it comes out two weeks later that they were guilty.  Really, A-roid, you cousin' in the Dominican Republic was your source of steroids, I think that was Sammy Sosa's excuse too buddy.

My advice would be to be cautious when choosing role models, or someone to look up to.  Look beyond those who can just shoot a nice jumper.  Look for those who are really doing something good for the world and are legit, honest people.  Those are the ones we should praise.

One Love, Tim

Filed under: Steroids

What has he done now? Carrot Top Steroids nightmare. I guess it might add something to his Vegas show.

Filed under: steroids

MarkEdwards says...

<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"><p> </p><p> Mark McGwire will be announced as the St. Louis Cardinals hitting coach Monday, no doubt a move by his close personal friend Tony LaRussa to help get Big Mac into the Hall Of Fame and try to overlook all those nasty rumors of violating Baseball's substance abuse policy.

The video above may be McGwire's best performance ever.  THAT'S the kind of leader I want kids to look up to and team members to learn from.

Now you Cards fans have NOTHING on the Cubs.  If only you could get Barry Bonds for Strength and Conditioning Coach.

Filed under: Steroids

Some people just don't know when they've been humiliated and discredited:

Roger Clemens has filed an appeal of his dismissed defamation suit against Brian McNamee.

Clemens filed a notice Friday with the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to review the decisions of U.S. District Judge Keith P. Ellison, who threw out most of Clemens' case in February and dismissed the remainder of the suit Aug. 28.

The seven-time Cy Young Award winner sued his former personal trainer in Texas state court in January 2008, a month after McNamee's accusations against the pitcher were published in the Mitchell Report. The suit was moved a month later to federal court in Houston.


I would say that there's very little hope that the case will be heard. It's a defamation suit where there is overwhelming evidence that the person claiming to have been defamed has no credibility. The law could ignore the facts, and give Clemens his day in court, but even if he were to climb the mountain and win, who's to say the judgement wouldn't be one brand new spanking dollar bill? There's no sympathy to be found in a jury; Clemens would be insane to put his hopes on a jury.
McNamee claimed in the Mitchell Report that he injected Clemens with steroids and human growth hormone at least 16 times in 1998, 2000 and 2001. He also sued Clemens for defamation on July 31 in federal court in Brooklyn, N.Y.

Clemens said McNamee's statements, which the trainer also repeated to Sports Illustrated's Web site, were "untrue and defamatory."

Clemens and McNamee repeated their conflicting claims last year to a congressional committee, which then asked the Justice Department to launch a probe into whether the pitcher lied. A federal grand jury in Washington has been investigating Clemens.


By and large, Clemens is now an outcast, similar in a lot of ways to Rafael Palmiero, Mark McGwire, and Barry Bonds. The four of them were all big-name athletes, with endorsements, fans and All-Star game appearances to go along with being loved and cheered every day.

How does it mess with your head to lose all of that, and lose it by having all of your lies exposed for the world to see? In the case of Roger Clemens, it has left him thinking he can write his own facts and make people do whatever he wants them to do. He is acting like a deranged control freak, but, this time, the courts don't care. His douchebaggery is now in the public record. Somewhere, Jon Gosselin must be smiling, because if Clemens is in the news, it means a handful of people are making douchebag comments about Clemens and not about him,

X posted at Talking Smack About Sports

Filed under: Steroids

KFo says...

Filed under: Steroids

beingbrad says...

The Belgian bodybuilding championship has been cancelled after doping officials showed up and all the competitors fled.

The bodybuilders just grabbed their gear and ran off when a doping official came into the room, according to officials.

- cbc news

Filed under: steroids

tuyenvo says...

Amid all the steroid scandals, I came across this story of uncommon sportsmanship. What a story and a lesson to teach young athletes about the true importance of sports - caring about teammates, respecting your opponents, and building character that will extend beyond the court. Nowadays, talented kids are being plucked out of junior high and groomed to be superstars in college and beyond without ever getting to experience the simple joy of playing a friendly high school game. I'd much rather root for kids like Darius McNeal and Johntel Franklin than spoiled millionaires who cheat or behave badly.

Filed under: steroids

thejackb says...

Sports Illustrated is reporting that A-Rod tested positive for having taken anabolic steroids. I have really begun to wonder about how many ballplayers were NOT taking steroids.

"In 2003, when he won the American League home run title and the AL Most Valuable Player award as a shortstop for the Texas Rangers, Alex Rodriguez tested positive for two anabolic steroids, four sources have independently told Sports Illustrated.

Rodriguez's name appears on a list of 104 players who tested positive for performance-enhancing drugs in Major League Baseball's '03 survey testing, SI's sources say. As part of a joint agreement with the MLB Players Association, the testing was conducted to determine if it was necessary to impose mandatory random drug testing across the major leagues in 2004.

When approached by an SI reporter on Thursday at a gym in Miami, Rodriguez declined to discuss his 2003 test results. "You'll have to talk to the union," said Rodriguez, the Yankees' third baseman since his trade to New York in February 2004. When asked if there was an explanation for his positive test, he said, "I'm not saying anything."

Phone messages left by SI for players' union executive director Donald Fehr were not returned.

Though MLB's drug policy has expressly prohibited the use of steroids without a valid prescription since 1991, there were no penalties for a positive test in 2003. The results of that year's survey testing of 1,198 players were meant to be anonymous under the agreement between the commissioner's office and the players association. Rodriguez's testing information was found, however, after federal agents, armed with search warrants, seized the '03 test results from Comprehensive Drug Testing, Inc., of Long Beach, Calif., one of two labs used by MLB in connection with that year's survey testing. The seizure took place in April 2004 as part of the government's investigation into 10 major league players linked to the BALCO scandal -- though Rodriguez himself has never been connected to BALCO."

Filed under: Steroids

thejackb says...

Sports Illustrated is reporting that A-Rod tested positive for having taken anabolic steroids. I have really begun to wonder about how many ballplayers were NOT taking steroids.

"In 2003, when he won the American League home run title and the AL Most Valuable Player award as a shortstop for the Texas Rangers, Alex Rodriguez tested positive for two anabolic steroids, four sources have independently told Sports Illustrated.

Rodriguez's name appears on a list of 104 players who tested positive for performance-enhancing drugs in Major League Baseball's '03 survey testing, SI's sources say. As part of a joint agreement with the MLB Players Association, the testing was conducted to determine if it was necessary to impose mandatory random drug testing across the major leagues in 2004.

When approached by an SI reporter on Thursday at a gym in Miami, Rodriguez declined to discuss his 2003 test results. "You'll have to talk to the union," said Rodriguez, the Yankees' third baseman since his trade to New York in February 2004. When asked if there was an explanation for his positive test, he said, "I'm not saying anything."

Phone messages left by SI for players' union executive director Donald Fehr were not returned.

Though MLB's drug policy has expressly prohibited the use of steroids without a valid prescription since 1991, there were no penalties for a positive test in 2003. The results of that year's survey testing of 1,198 players were meant to be anonymous under the agreement between the commissioner's office and the players association. Rodriguez's testing information was found, however, after federal agents, armed with search warrants, seized the '03 test results from Comprehensive Drug Testing, Inc., of Long Beach, Calif., one of two labs used by MLB in connection with that year's survey testing. The seizure took place in April 2004 as part of the government's investigation into 10 major league players linked to the BALCO scandal -- though Rodriguez himself has never been connected to BALCO."

Filed under: Steroids

thejackb says...

Sports Illustrated is reporting that A-Rod tested positive for having taken anabolic steroids. I have really begun to wonder about how many ballplayers were NOT taking steroids.

"In 2003, when he won the American League home run title and the AL Most Valuable Player award as a shortstop for the Texas Rangers, Alex Rodriguez tested positive for two anabolic steroids, four sources have independently told Sports Illustrated.

Rodriguez's name appears on a list of 104 players who tested positive for performance-enhancing drugs in Major League Baseball's '03 survey testing, SI's sources say. As part of a joint agreement with the MLB Players Association, the testing was conducted to determine if it was necessary to impose mandatory random drug testing across the major leagues in 2004.

When approached by an SI reporter on Thursday at a gym in Miami, Rodriguez declined to discuss his 2003 test results. "You'll have to talk to the union," said Rodriguez, the Yankees' third baseman since his trade to New York in February 2004. When asked if there was an explanation for his positive test, he said, "I'm not saying anything."

Phone messages left by SI for players' union executive director Donald Fehr were not returned.

Though MLB's drug policy has expressly prohibited the use of steroids without a valid prescription since 1991, there were no penalties for a positive test in 2003. The results of that year's survey testing of 1,198 players were meant to be anonymous under the agreement between the commissioner's office and the players association. Rodriguez's testing information was found, however, after federal agents, armed with search warrants, seized the '03 test results from Comprehensive Drug Testing, Inc., of Long Beach, Calif., one of two labs used by MLB in connection with that year's survey testing. The seizure took place in April 2004 as part of the government's investigation into 10 major league players linked to the BALCO scandal -- though Rodriguez himself has never been connected to BALCO."

Filed under: Steroids