Author Topic: NFL to test for more performance-enhancing drugs  (Read 1657 times)

Dos Equis

  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 63777
  • I am. The most interesting man in the world. (Not)
NFL to test for more performance-enhancing drugs
« on: January 24, 2007, 04:24:51 PM »
Good move, but doesn't go far enough IMO.  They don't really want to eliminate the sauce from the NFL.  Otherwise, they would do year round, random testing of everyone.  I doubt that ever happens. 

NFL to test for more performance-enhancing drugs
Associated Press

NEW YORK -- The NFL and its players union have agreed to more extensive testing for performance-enhancing drugs and have added the blood-boosting substance EPO to the league's list of banned substances.

NFL steroid policy changes

Key changes to the steroid policy adopted by the NFL and its players' union Wednesday:
• Blood boosting substance EPO added to list of banned supstances. NFL will be only North American professional sports league to regularly test for EPO.

• Players suspended for using performance-enhancing drugs will forfeit a prorated portion of their signing bonuses.

• Increase from seven to 10 of the number of players on each team randomly tested each week during the season. Also, the unpredictability of random testing during the season and offseason increased.

• All players now will be subject to random carbon isotope ratio testing, previously used only to confirm positive tests. Test used to detect doses of testosterone.

• The NFL agreed to a $500,000 grant to the UCLA Olympic testing laboratory and other researchers for further testing on HGH. The league also will establish a group to study issues related to HGH.

• The NFL Youth Football fund has approved a $1.2 million steroids education fund at the Center for Health Promotion Research at the Oregon Health and Science University (OHSU) in Portland, Ore.
 
The agreement, announced jointly Wednesday by the league and union, also adds to the financial penalties for players suspended for using those drugs. Players suspended for using steroids or other performance-enhancing drugs will forfeit a prorated portion of their signing bonuses.

Signing bonuses often are the only guaranteed portion of a player's compensation.

In addition to the new test for EPO, the deal includes an increase from seven to 10 of the number of players on each team randomly tested each week during the season for steroids and other performance-enhancing drugs. That means there will be 12,000 tests each season, up from the current 10,000.

"It is important that the NFL and its players continue to be leaders on the issue of illegal and dangerous performance-enhancing drugs in sports," said NFL commissioner Roger Goodell. "These latest improvements will help ensure that we continue to have a strong and effective program. As we have done in the past, we will review and modify the policy on an ongoing basis."

The new policy will make the NFL the only North American sports league to test for EPO.

Baseball conducts urine tests of major and minor league players for performance-enhancing drugs and stimulants, with each player tested at least twice randomly per year. Baseball does not conduct blood tests and does not test for EPO or human growth hormone, but will test for HGH if a urine test for it is validated.

A baseball player who tests positive for steroids is banned for 50 games for a first violation. A player who tests positive for stimulants is required to undergo counseling for a first violation.

The NBA randomly tests players four times a season. Players who test positive for steroids or performance-enhancing drugs get a 10-game suspension for a first offense, a 25-game ban for a second offense, a one-year suspension for a third offense and disqualification if they're caught for a fourth time.

In the NHL, every player is subject to up to two random tests a year. A first-time offender gets a 20-game suspension without pay and mandatory referral to the league's substance abuse program. A second positive test carries a 60-game suspension.

The NFL policy mandates a four-game suspension for a first offense and a year for a second.

The enhancements to the drug policy have been pending for almost six months -- from about the time Goodell succeeded Paul Tagliabue as commissioner. The league and union began negotiating on additional tests and substances in September, but didn't reach agreement until this week.

Those discussions followed congressional reaction to a story in the Charlotte Observer on steroid prescriptions given to Carolina Panthers players by a South Carolina doctor during the 2003 season, which ended with Carolina losing the Super Bowl to New England.

One provision of the agreement increases the unpredictability of random testing during the season and offseason, making it harder for players using performance-enhancing substances to regulate their usage because they won't know when they might be tested.

EPO, which provides users more stamina by increasing their number of red blood cells, is used primarily by long-distance runners and cyclists. That testing will begin this summer when teams go to training camp.

The program also includes additional use of carbon isotope ratio testing on a random basis to detect for doses of testosterone. All players now will be subject to those tests, previously used only to confirm positive tests.

The NFL also agreed to a $500,000 grant to the UCLA Olympic testing laboratory and other researchers for further testing on HGH. The league also will establish a group to study issues related to HGH.

In addition, the NFL Youth Football fund, endowed by both the league and union, has approved a $1.2 million steroids education fund at the Center for Health Promotion Research at the Oregon Health and Science University (OHSU) in Portland, Ore.
 
http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/news/story?id=2741136

pumpster

  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 18890
  • If you're reading this you have too much free time
Re: NFL to test for more performance-enhancing drugs
« Reply #1 on: January 25, 2007, 04:49:09 AM »
Too bad, i prefer seeing them as good as they can be. There are still some loopholes, including GH testing:

The policy changes were praised yesterday by Dr. Gary I. Wadler, an associate professor of medicine at New York University who is a member of the World Anti-Doping Agency. But Wadler said in a telephone interview that the league still needed to include testing for human growth hormone, or HGH.

There is no reliable test for HGH. The N.F.L., pledged a minimum of $500,000 for the development of an HGH test yesterday. Wadler said that amount is a fraction of the millions of dollars the antidoping agency spent on research each year. Wadler said the league should have a provision in its collective-bargaining agreement that allowed for blood samples to be collected and frozen until a reliable drug test came to fruition. Blood collection, he said, would at least provide a deterrent to the use of HGH until a test was developed.

“They should at least have paved the way by saying that blood testing is an acceptable means of obtaining bodily fluid specimens,” Wadler said. “They’ve made some moves in the right direction, but I don’t think we should be in a position of incrementalism.”

Dos Equis

  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 63777
  • I am. The most interesting man in the world. (Not)
Re: NFL to test for more performance-enhancing drugs
« Reply #2 on: January 25, 2007, 07:27:25 AM »
GH has probably been the drug of choice for years.