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re: Chances for major violations against LSU, Bama and Auburn from SWATS debacle
Posted on 2/4/13 at 8:11 am to WDE24
Posted on 2/4/13 at 8:11 am to WDE24
Auburn Connection... We used the Chips which are not banned... Now some of the other stuff is banned, but Auburn did not use that...
They are called “chips” — tiny holographic patches worn on the skin at Chinese acupuncture points that, according to the company that supplied them to Etheridge, Sports With Alternatives To Steroids (S.W.A.T.S.), help the body maintain and replenish its energy supply.
If S.W.A.T.S. sounds familiar to you, it should. The company’s founder, Mitch Ross, has been in the news recently for another of his controversial products — The Ultimate Spray. It’s a supplement supposedly made from deer velvet antler which is touted to contain a growth hormone banned by every major professional sports league. Ross had ties to several coaches in the NFL and many players, but the league recently informed them they had to end their relationships with the supplement company.
But his other major product, these chips, have not been touted as containing any banned substance, and that’s what Etheridge says he used during his rehabilitation. When he was first injured, tearing ligaments in his neck and cracking his fifth vertebrae while making a tackle, doctors didn’t know if he’d ever take the field again. Eight months later, he was cleared to play. He credits the chips, in part, for his quick recovery.
They are called “chips” — tiny holographic patches worn on the skin at Chinese acupuncture points that, according to the company that supplied them to Etheridge, Sports With Alternatives To Steroids (S.W.A.T.S.), help the body maintain and replenish its energy supply.
If S.W.A.T.S. sounds familiar to you, it should. The company’s founder, Mitch Ross, has been in the news recently for another of his controversial products — The Ultimate Spray. It’s a supplement supposedly made from deer velvet antler which is touted to contain a growth hormone banned by every major professional sports league. Ross had ties to several coaches in the NFL and many players, but the league recently informed them they had to end their relationships with the supplement company.
But his other major product, these chips, have not been touted as containing any banned substance, and that’s what Etheridge says he used during his rehabilitation. When he was first injured, tearing ligaments in his neck and cracking his fifth vertebrae while making a tackle, doctors didn’t know if he’d ever take the field again. Eight months later, he was cleared to play. He credits the chips, in part, for his quick recovery.
Posted on 2/4/13 at 12:19 pm to allin2010
you post a NTY article? seems legit
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