
nopussyfooting
Favorite team: | Alabama ![]() |
Location: | The Ham |
Biography: | |
Interests: | |
Occupation: | |
Number of Posts: | 274 |
Registered on: | 4/17/2009 |
Online Status: |
Recent Posts
Message
re: When will Dee Hart commit?
Posted by nopussyfooting on 10/8/10 at 5:27 pm
I'm a huge Michigan fan. What is the latest on Demetrius Hart? Our program could really use a guy like him.
- Josh from Ann Arbor, Mich.
I keep hearing Michigan for Dee Hart despite that recent article in the Orlando Sentinel and other rumors coming out of Alabama. I could be wrong and I think Bama could have landed Hart if it went after him hard as a running back from the start, but the Tide want him as a receiver and Dee wants to be a running back.
I know his good friend and teammate, Hasean Clinton-Dix, is committed to Alabama, but as far as a fit for his skills Michigan is the pick. He would be amazing in Rich Rodriguez's offense. All of my sources still feel confident the Wolverines will land this one.
Mike Farrell (Rivals)
- Josh from Ann Arbor, Mich.
I keep hearing Michigan for Dee Hart despite that recent article in the Orlando Sentinel and other rumors coming out of Alabama. I could be wrong and I think Bama could have landed Hart if it went after him hard as a running back from the start, but the Tide want him as a receiver and Dee wants to be a running back.
I know his good friend and teammate, Hasean Clinton-Dix, is committed to Alabama, but as far as a fit for his skills Michigan is the pick. He would be amazing in Rich Rodriguez's offense. All of my sources still feel confident the Wolverines will land this one.
Mike Farrell (Rivals)
re: When will Dee Hart commit?
Posted by nopussyfooting on 10/8/10 at 4:04 pm
Michigan lock
re: Glen Coffee arrested.. lulz
Posted by nopussyfooting on 10/8/10 at 12:36 pm
quote:
you can't fix stupid as my hero Ron White would say. Do you like watching COPS? same thing?
I wouldn't run to a message board and celebrate a person making a mistake.
re: Glen Coffee arrested.. lulz
Posted by nopussyfooting on 10/8/10 at 12:33 pm
quote:
We should start a thread playing a game called "Which ex-Gump gets Arrested Next"
You enjoy watching other people fall? Great life you lead.
re: Trent Richardson
Posted by nopussyfooting on 10/4/10 at 11:18 pm
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.
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.
re: Mythical Championship for Bama
Posted by nopussyfooting on 10/1/10 at 4:25 pm
quote:
Toby Gerhart was a better running back IN COLLEGE.
Even though he averaged less ypc.
re: Mythical Championship for Bama
Posted by nopussyfooting on 10/1/10 at 4:23 pm
quote:
Once again this is Bama fans being ignorant to the fact Ingram played for YOU GUYS and Gerhart played for Stanford.
It's Gerhart's fault Stanford's defense gave up 31+ points 6 times last year?
Ingram had the luxury of 2 things Gerhart never had - a great backup taking the load off and a great defense never allowing more than 24 points all season.
What will you say when Ingram gets drafted higher?
re: Mythical Championship for Bama
Posted by nopussyfooting on 10/1/10 at 3:33 pm
quote::lol:
Mythical Championship for Bama
Toby Gerhart was better than Ingram last year.
re: Mythical Championship for Bama
Posted by nopussyfooting on 10/1/10 at 3:30 pm
quote:
TTsTowel
Aubarn homer. Dumbass. feeble-minded frick. Complete prick. Etc, etc...
re: Bammers crying over AU 'spearing' QB and injuring him
Posted by nopussyfooting on 9/20/10 at 8:38 pm
quote::lol:
CFBFAN1121
cries often about others crying
re: Alabama @ Arkansas Predictions
Posted by nopussyfooting on 9/20/10 at 2:16 pm
38-20 Bama...
re: Does Chizik really think God wanted AU to win?
Posted by nopussyfooting on 9/19/10 at 12:27 am
:lol:
re: Pic from Chizik's pep rally speech tonight
Posted by nopussyfooting on 9/15/10 at 11:38 pm
quote:
I'd be surprised if 50 turned up to see Lester.
The same Lester that owns Auburn?
:lol:
re: Clinton-Dix visiting UF.
Posted by nopussyfooting on 9/15/10 at 1:32 am
quote:
No, he recently came out and said he is taking visits. With Arkansas, Florida and Florida St putting on full court press i wouldn't be surprised to see him switch to a different school. I don't think he will, but there is that chance.
Wrong again, pal...He stated from the very beginning he was taking visits.
re: Clinton-Dix visiting UF.
Posted by nopussyfooting on 9/15/10 at 1:27 am
quote:
To say you wouldn't be worried about losing the 10th best player in the nation is stupid. I would be starting to get very concerned about Dix wavering. He went from 100% committed to Alabama last month and told Saban he wasn't going to take any visits, and now he is 80% committed and has scheduled 2 visits to Arkansas and Florida. His cousin, and teammate LaQuentin Smith has been a silent commit to Arkansas since July and Dix has stated that Roderick Ryles and Smith has been in his ear about Arkansas since July.
He was always going to take visits.
re: Clinton-Dix visiting UF.
Posted by nopussyfooting on 9/15/10 at 1:25 am
"You could rate my commitment to Alabama as a nine out of ten. I have always said I was going to check out other schools, and I am just going down the list," said Clinton-Dix. "I visited Michigan with my teammate Dee Hart the weekend before last. I loved the visit. Their coaches showed me a good time, and they played a great game against UConn, but it was just too cold. Even in September you could tell the winters would be pretty bad so that is probably not an option.
"The schools that I am still planning to visit and check out are Florida, Florida State and USC. Nothing has changed with Alabama. That is still where I plan to enroll in school in the fall of 2011. My relationship with the coaches there is still solid and I stay in touch with guys like Marvin Shinn and Brent Calloway. I still like everything about Alabama, and I am going back to Tuscaloosa for the Florida game."
"The schools that I am still planning to visit and check out are Florida, Florida State and USC. Nothing has changed with Alabama. That is still where I plan to enroll in school in the fall of 2011. My relationship with the coaches there is still solid and I stay in touch with guys like Marvin Shinn and Brent Calloway. I still like everything about Alabama, and I am going back to Tuscaloosa for the Florida game."
re: Top Juco prospect commits to BAMA
Posted by nopussyfooting on 9/5/10 at 1:52 am
:pimp:
re: Marvin Shinn-Bama WR Commit
Posted by nopussyfooting on 9/4/10 at 11:42 am
re: Marvin Shinn-Bama WR Commit
Posted by nopussyfooting on 9/4/10 at 11:41 am
Marvin caught 8 passes for 163 yards, including touchdown catches of 32 and 77 yards. Plus he played with a sprained ankle through the game.
re: More Chris Low BS
Posted by nopussyfooting on 8/30/10 at 12:47 pm
quote:
Unless they start putting both of them on the field like Felix/Mcfadden were, I don't see it happening.
You will see some of it this year.
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