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re: Trent Richardson

Posted on 10/4/10 at 10:12 pm to
Posted by Lunchbox48
Member since Feb 2009
924 posts
Posted on 10/4/10 at 10:12 pm to
quote:

Its god given and hard work, thats all.


Strongly Disagree.

And yes I've been around them. I'm not against PED's. I won't make accusations about specific/current players. But I will say that my brother played football in college and took orals and injectables his junior year. I knew of at least four of his teammates who took them while playing in college. They all got introduced to them in college, by other players.

I coached at a private school in Memphis for 2 years and the full-time coaches there were all but certain they had a couple players on them, but they never confronted them about it.
Posted by bmy
Nashville
Member since Oct 2007
48203 posts
Posted on 10/4/10 at 10:29 pm to
quote:


Yea Richardson does have a "freak" look, but you need to look at Ford's arms when he gets his 1 touch per game. They're pretty damn impressive.



they are

Posted by Louie T
htx
Member since Dec 2006
36321 posts
Posted on 10/4/10 at 10:48 pm to
quote:

I find it HILARIOUS that so many gumps accuse Joel Bonomolo of juicing
went to HS with him - def juicer

Posted by TTsTowel
RIP Bow9den/Coastie
Member since Feb 2010
91649 posts
Posted on 10/4/10 at 10:50 pm to
quote:

went to HS with him - def juicer


Yeah, i don't doubt it. But it's funny that they accuse him of it when they have TR on their team..
Posted by memphisplaya
Member since Jan 2009
85827 posts
Posted on 10/4/10 at 10:51 pm to
quote:

Yeah, i don't doubt it. But it's funny that they accuse him of it when they have TR on their team..



TR doesn't juice... he is like Ford he is a BEAST in the weight room
Posted by wardamnamerica
Member since Sep 2010
564 posts
Posted on 10/4/10 at 10:53 pm to
I know its a lot more common than most people think, but its not common with stars in the NCAA. Lifting only does so much and when you couple steroid usage with below average talent you usually get an injury. I`m not debating how prevalent usage is in football today. I see my old high school team and I know kids are using over the counter test boosters to gain 25lbs and put 75lbs on their bench but you don`t become a a 5 star with roids sorry. All the kids I knew who took them loved football but were just a tad too slow and lacked the play making ability thats required to be a star.

I`m not against usage either. I`m pretty confident that much the NFL is on HGH and test boosters. But, thats a problem the NFL has created by extending seasons thus increasing chance of injury and shortening careers due to increased wear and tear. Some of them are definitely on something. They`re professional though, and they have to do whatever it takes to stay healthy. Like many vices in our world, Roids have a lot of benefits and few side affects when used the correct way.

However, until they test positive its a travesty to bash or accuse anyone who hasn`t given you a legitimate reason to. I understand your brother played. But, if you`ve ever spent time around big time stars/athletes you see that its god given and its up to them to do the hard work to improve on it. Herschel Walker is a perfect example. He is known for his 1000 push up/sit up/ dip work out. Coaches never required him to lift after he set the freshmen bench record. Overall, weightlifting is important, but it can only do so much.
Posted by TTsTowel
RIP Bow9den/Coastie
Member since Feb 2010
91649 posts
Posted on 10/4/10 at 10:53 pm to
I am pretty sure they all juice.

In fact, we need to be giving Onterio McCallebb something really good so he can gain some weight and muscle fast.
Posted by MagillaGuerilla
Nick Fairley Fan Club, Founder
Member since Nov 2009
35446 posts
Posted on 10/4/10 at 10:59 pm to
quote:

But it's funny that they accuse him of it when they have TR on their team..


He doesn't juice.

Unless someone is coming up and yelling "SURPRISE!" and proceeds to stick a needle in him, he doesn't juice. I know this for a fact...
Posted by wardamnamerica
Member since Sep 2010
564 posts
Posted on 10/4/10 at 11:00 pm to
Bonamolu maybe. I wondered about Eltoro Freeman but he has kept it on. Testings a joke in the NCAA anyways. They all know they`re getting tested, but you can tell when someones on it. I`ve had class with most of our O-line n d-line and they are just grown arse men. I can only presume thats how most players are.

I wish mcalleb would find creases better so he`d stop getting clobbered. Its like watching a guy learn to surf at a big wave competition lol
Posted by GeekedUp
Virginia
Member since Jun 2009
1965 posts
Posted on 10/4/10 at 11:15 pm to
quote:

All this time I thought it was a power clean


Thanks to dapado33 for the insight!!
Posted by nopussyfooting
The Ham
Member since Apr 2009
274 posts
Posted on 10/4/10 at 11:18 pm to
In 1981, Fitton was on his way to England with a stash of steroids to sell when two federal agents detained him in Hartsfield Atlanta International Airport and demanded, "Where are the uppers and downers?" Fitton explained that he was only transporting steroids: 22,000 doses' worth. The police confiscated his pills, which Fitton asked his lawyer to try to recover. He never got the drugs back, pleading guilty to illegal trafficking in anabolic steroids, for which he received a one-year suspended sentence. (The drugs weren't classified as controlled substances until 1990.)

After the arrest Auburn fired Fitton. Still, he remained in town, dealing and researching steroids as intensely as ever. He says he advised or sold drugs to athletes and coaches at Auburn, Baylor, Maryland, Nebraska, South Carolina, Virginia and Wisconsin, among others. College players often found him through local weightlifters. "I called the cops on Fitton on several occasions because I knew what was going on," says Virgil Knight, an Auburn strength coach at the time. "But they had bigger fish to go after. They said, 'Steroids? That's a third-class drug.' "

One former Fitton client who played football at a major college program and went on to the NFL, who spoke with SI on the condition of anonymity, says that he never saw Fitton in person, instead placing his orders over the phone. And, though he never set foot on the Lincoln campus, Fitton alleges that several members of the Nebraska football team were regular clients, including Dean Steinkuhler, the 1983 Outland Trophy winner who later, wanting to come clean, admitted to SI that he used steroids.

Other college players, including Nebraska offensive tackle Todd Carpenter and Wisconsin center Dan Turk, were listed in the ledger documenting Fitton's steroid business. He recalls that before the 1984 Orange Bowl he received a call from a nervous Husker complaining that he and his teammates had mistakenly left their methyl testosterone -- a chewable supplement that rapidly increases testosterone levels and is thought to foster aggression -- back in Lincoln. Fitton says that he obtained a couple of bottles and sent them overnight in time for the national title game against Miami, which Nebraska lost 31--30.

Before the '84 Summer Games, Fitton consulted U.S. athletes and foreign Olympians training in the States and created a brochure of clearance times, a copy of which SI obtained from a former powerlifter. Athletes could consult the document to learn how long they had to abandon a cycle before a test. (Meanwhile, antidoping fervor was rapidly intensifying; with evidence mounting, the American College of Sports Medicine had reversed its stance and asserted that steroids "may" enhance athletic performance, and soon other fitness organizations followed suit.) Fitton affixed his name and number to the pamphlets and made photocopies for roughly 100 athletes and coaches. When a U.S. track and field coach left several copies in a training facility, Fitton received calls from ABC, NBC and CBS on the same day. Fitton remembers telling the careless coach, "You don't have to apologize, but you've got to realize that people aren't as open about this as you and I are."

After that incident Fitton changed his phone number and took inventory of his drug contacts. He realized that he had about 2,000 active clients and reckoned that by this time he'd talked to as many as 10,000 steroid users about their experiences, side effects and muscle growth. "It was like one big research trial," he says. "I kept all the [scientific] information in my head."

While hundreds of thousands of dollars moved through his accounts, Fitton lived simply. His biggest indulgence was paying for powerlifting friends to travel to international events. If clients couldn't afford a cycle, Fitton might give the product away. He claims that he let one Auburn football player open a metal cabinet in his apartment and take whatever steroids he wanted.
Posted by GeekedUp
Virginia
Member since Jun 2009
1965 posts
Posted on 10/4/10 at 11:21 pm to
Great article!!!!
Posted by ACL11190
DA U IZ BAK
Member since Dec 2007
30043 posts
Posted on 10/4/10 at 11:22 pm to




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