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Index
Products and Advancements in the Anti-Aging Marketplace
For Anti Aging Supplements, Get Expert Advice
Do Natural Stress, Anxiety, and Depression Supplements Really Work?
Hoodia Supplements: What's In There?
Know Your Bodybuilding Supplement - L-Arginine
Can You Get Fuller Breasts From Herbal Breast Enlargement Supplements?
Are You Buying African Hoodia?
The Benefits of Coral Calcium as a Dietary Supplement
Bodybuilding News - The Latest Cutting Edge Information!
Fast Weight Loss Tips and The Best Supplements
Cleansing the Body for a Detox Weight Loss!
The Best Anti-Aging Supplement - Exercise!
Copper: Functions, Benefits and Sources
The Importance Of Creatine In Building Lean Muscle
DHEA – Can DHEA Help Keep You Young?
Six Popular Diabetes Supplements and Their Effect on Type II
An Anti Aging Supplement Diet Is Great Prevention
Benefits of Lutein as a Dietary Supplement
Discount Creatine
Herbal Supplement for Energy
Health Food Supplements - Consumer Guide
Human Growth Hormone Supplements Benefits And Safety
Vitamin C - The Most Common Health Food Supplement
Online Health Supplements
The Secrets of Looking and Feeling Younger and HGH Supplements
Immune System Supplement
The Role Of L-Glutamine In Building Muscle
Male Libido – The Best 4 Natural Supplements To Increase Male Libido
Acid Reflux: Study Says Drugs Just as Good as Surgery
Melatonin Supplements - When Less Is More
What Is The Best Muscle Building Supplement Available Today?
Natural Ways to Increase Testosterone Bioavailability in Athletes
Memory Loss, Nerve Damage Caused by Vitamin B12 Deficiency: Pernicious Anemia
Staying Healthy Naturally with a Herbal Nutrition Supplement
Antibiotics? I Think Not
Antioxidant Supplements for Better Health
Vitamin Supplements in a Liquid World
Women's Supplements for Sexual Health
L-Carnitine and Sports Performance
Athletes and Steroids: Their Lying and You're Buying It
Glyconutrients Cells Talk!
Before and After Photos in Fitness Magazines
Getting Ripped Quickly: What You Need to Know
The Truth About Vitamins A, D, E, and K Supplements
Choosing the Right Vitamin Supplement
Zinc Deficiency

Athletes and Steroids: Their Lying and You're Buying It

By Andrew Frisella
Athletes are lying to us. They are lying and we believe their lies. Well, most of us do. You see, many Athletes that test positive for banned substances are blaming dietary supplements as the cause for the positive test. Lets examine the following statement from Iowa State linebacker Matt Robertson who was recently kicked off the Iowa state football team for testing positive for a banned substance. "I take full responsibility for taking an over-the-counter supplement that is banned by the NCAA," Robertson said in a statement released Monday. "I am paying a heavy price for a very bad decision, as I will never again wear an Iowa State uniform. I hope my example will serve as a warning to others contemplating use of dietary supplements." Statements like these are causing an unnecessary hysteria amongst the general public regarding dietary supplements. In Mr. Robertson’s quote, specifically notice the term “dietary supplements”. Dietary supplement is a very broad term, it covers literally thousands of different kinds of products. There is only one kind of dietary supplement that will cause a positive result for steroid tests. These supplements are called pro-hormones. Did a pro-hormone cause Mr. Robertson’s positive result? Possibly, but we will never know the truth. Pro-hormones are used to raise the body’s testosterone levels, just like steroids, but at a much lesser effect. Any athlete who takes a pro-hormone knows what it does. They know that pro-hormones are designed to elevate testosterone resulting it more muscle mass and greater athletic performance. On top of that, pro-hormones say right on the bottle something to the effect of “Professional and amateur athletes subject to performance enhancing substance testing should consult with their sanctioning body before using this product as use of such may cause a reactive drug test.” Pretty clear isn’t it? You can’t tell me that Mr. Robertson can’t read, he is “an academic all-Big 12 performer who was as good in the classroom as he was on the field," according to his coach Dan McCarney. Blaming a positive test on one of these products may be true because they can cause a positive on a steroid test. However, it would also be very easy to blame a positive test on a dietary supplement when they athlete was actually using a steroid. Since the actual supplements are rarely made public, it is easy to blame a positive test on a dietary supplement. It doesn’t make a difference because a positive test is a positive test, right? Wrong. By these athletes blaming their positive test on dietary supplements instead of steroids they are in effect “passing the buck” That is, they are claiming ignorance, instead of taking responsibility, and they are hurting the multi-billion dollar dietary supplement industry in the process. This is not okay, not only because it creates false beliefs among the public about supplements, but also because it gives the federal government a reason to further restrict what you can buy without a prescription. Would you like to have to go to your doctor to get a prescription for a multi-vitamin? What if you wanted to buy a protein supplement? Would you want to have to go to your doctor for that? I didn’t think so. These athletes and their organizations are being extremely irresponsible by using broad terms like dietary supplements when describing positive drug tests. The NCAA and other governing organizations should be forced to reveal what exact substance these athletes are testing positive for. By not doing so these organizations are allowing athletes to save face at the expense of an entire multi-billion dollar industry. By forcing the NCAA and other governing bodies to name the specific substance that was tested positive for they would eliminate all confusion on what is and is not the cause of positive tests. Either that or governing bodies including the NCAA and the press should be educated in the proper terminology of the dietary supplement industry. Painting reactive tests with the term “dietary supplements” is inaccurate, unfair and irresponsible. Take for example Rafael Palmeiro, everyone remembers his overly compelling capital hill testimony. How ironic that just a few weeks later Rafael tested positive for Stanozolol, a steroid. Palmeiro tried hard to pass the blame. He blamed “tainted” dietary supplements, and when that didn’t fly he blamed a vitamin B12 shot. Well stanozol is a very specific and popular steroid. There is no possible way that a positive for stanazolol can be from dietary supplements or B12. After people started realizing this, Palmeiro started claiming ignorance, saying that he never knowingly took steroids. Well I guess Rafael will be making a good living after baseball considering he is the only person on earth that knows where to find pills that jump off the table into your mouth on their own. What a cool idea, the little blue pill could be come the little blue jumping pill. That would be neat to see. There needs to be some accountability among athletes for their positive tests. Those who test positive should not be allowed to pass the blame onto the dietary supplement industry. These athletes should be shown for what they really did. Did they take a pro-hormone because they were too stupid to read the label? Or did they take steroids? Knowing that if they were caught they could claim ignorance and blame “tainted” supplements. We will never know until the governing bodies start naming specific substances responsible for positive tests. By: Andrew Frisella http://www.LowPriceSupplements.com
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Andrew_Frisella


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