Steroids in Sports

Jan
15

USPS Pro Cycling Team and Defrauding the Government

The government is seeking to build a case against cyclist Lance Armstrong and/or his teammates for defrauding the U.S. government should they be found guilty of violating anti-doping rules.

Sponsors of the United States Postal Service cycling team included a “morals turpitude and drug clause” in contracts that called for severe penalties for cyclists who violated certain rules. Since the U.S. Postal Service is a government agency, anyone who defrauded the government by using anabolic steroids, erythropoeitin (EPO), or other banned substances or methods such as blood doping, could face serious criminal penalties. [Read more…]

Jan
14

Football Player Sentenced for Crime that Led to Waterloo Steroid Scandal

The former University of Waterloo football player that committed the crime “that ultimately brought down his former team in a steroid scandal that made international headlines” was sentenced to a 9-month conditional sentence of house arrest.   [Read more…]

Jan
13

The Sport of Football Itself is More Dangerous Than Anabolic Steroids

The dangers inherent in the sport of American football itself may be more dangerous than anabolic steroids. Such as statement may seem preposterous given the information overload of media messages demonizing steroids in sports.

Yet, the steroid hysteria that has permeated the sports media in the past decade has made a mockery of the concept of relative risk. Few people deny that anabolic steroids have serious side effects but the emphasis on steroids has led many people to overlook, ignore or discount serious risks present in sports. [Read more…]

Jan
11

Cyclist Commits Suicide Amidst Steroid / Doping Investigation

Alberto Leon, a former mountain bike racer, was found dead in his home outside of Madrid in what appeared to be a suicide.  Leon was one of several people implicated in Operación Galgo (Greyhound). Operación Galgo is the codename for a Spanish doping investigation that uncovered large quantities of anabolic steroids, stored blood bags and medical equipment used for transfusions during raids across the Iberian peninsula last year by La Guardia Civil. [Read more…]

Jan
08

Steroids and Corruption in Dominican Republic Baseball Factories

The Dominican Republic is an incredible baseball powerhouse with a solid talent base from which Major League Baseball (MLB) has been eager to tap. Almost a quarter of MLB players are from Latin America and the overwhelming majority of those hail from the Dominican Republic. This type of demand makes the Dominican baseball community particularly susceptible to exploitation by scouts, trainers and buscones who seek to profit by developing baseball talent. Steroid abuse, age falsification and bonus kickbacks have long been problems in the Dominican Republic. [Read more…]

Jan
07

World Anti-Doping Agency Releases an iPhone App

The World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) has officially released an application that can be downloaded from Apple’s iPhone App Store.  The application is simply a mobile-friendly version of the “List of Prohibited Substances and Methods” that appears on the orgnization’s website.   [Read more…]

Jan
06

Marathon Runners Use Steroids Too?

Lithuania marathon runner Zivile Balciunaite failed the testosterone/epitestosterone ratio (T/E ratio) anti-doping test at the 2010 European Athletics Championship in Barcelona in July. The Lithuanian Athletics Federation has suspended her until they complete their investigation into the positive doping test. [Read more…]

Jan
05

Steroid McCarthyism Keeps Jeff Bagwell Out of the Hall of Fame

Former Houston Astros Jeff Bagwell was denied entrance to the Major League Baseball Hall of Fame as “steroid McCarthyism” reared its ugly head. Bagwell’s statistics are worthy of the Hall of Fame but, unfortunately, Bagwell’s career has been tainted by the “steroid issue.” [Read more…]