Fredie is acting out now as well. This was not Fredie's best moment.
Freddie Roach Interview with David Tyler 12/30/09
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Exactly, and when David Tyler stated that....
"Fred, I have a graduate's degree
in Biochemistry and 30 years experience in developing blood chemistry tests.......I'll leave it alone, let's move forward."
Roach got all bent out of shape. Team Pacman continues to look suspect.Comment
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Yeah but but....Exactly, and when David Tyler stated that....
"Fred, I have a graduate's degree
in Biochemistry and 30 years experience in developing blood chemistry tests.......I'll leave it alone, let's move forward."
Roach got all bent out of shape. Team Pacman continues to look suspect.
but.....
This is Floyd Sr.
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this is for yall and mister tyler, the guy with is graduates degree and 30 years working with blood chemistry.........
this proves freddy right than the guy who is trying to say otherwise to freddie.......
this is from the side column of the article...........
AVAILABLE FOOD SUPPLEMENTS USED AS HGH RELEASERS
Pharmaceutical forms of human growth hormone releasers are available only through prescription or remain in the human-trial stage. But at some nutrition retailers and on dozens of websites, there is another form of HGH releaser: food supplements that cost a couple of dollars a day.
Some of these products, which go by names including GH Stak and Ageless Foundation, tout the same benefits as synthetic HGH.
"There seems to be increased marketing of these products around big events, like the Super Bowl and the Olympics," said Travis Tygart, chief executive officer of the United States Anti-Doping Agency. "We saw this at (the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City), and several companies marketed these products again before the 2004 Summer Games.
"We knew these products were being shipped directly to athletes in '04. It wouldn't surprise me at all if it happens again this summer."
Because these HGH releasers are nothing more than readily available amino acids, the building blocks of protein, the products don't run afoul of federal law or the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA).
"The HGH experts consulted by WADA strongly believe that amino-acid preparations cannot stimulate the HGH release strongly and substantially enough to have a doping effect," WADA spokesman Frederic Donze wrote in an e-mail.
A recent study by Syracuse University professor J.A. Kanaley showed that the main ingredient in most food-supplement HGH releasers, arginine, can spur the body's production of HGH when taken orally, although the effects are slight and not long-lasting.
The effectiveness of arginine is reduced when combined immediately with exercise, but makers of most HGH-releaser supplements advise taking the product before bedtime.
Gary Wadler, chairman of WADA's Prohibited List and Methods Subcommittee, said to get a sustained HGH boost from such supplements, a person would have to ingest such massive quan****** that it would lead to a severe upset stomach or diarrhea.
That may not stop elite athletes, according to Nathan Piasecki, a member of the U.S. Greco-Roman wrestling team until a urine sample collected by USADA in January 2007 showed he'd tested positive for anti-estrogenic agents and a steroid. An announcement from USADA in October 2007 said Piasecki established that the positive test stemmed from his use of the over-the-counter food supplement 6-OXO, manufactured by Ergopharm.
"I feel most elite athletes are pretty scientific in their training," said Piasecki, whose two-year ban ends in February. "They know what's legal, and if (a supplement) makes them feel good, I have no doubt they'd continue to use it even if there were some bad side effects.
"Once you get to that level, you're going to do whatever possible to get something extra."
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration -- which has limited authority to investigate supplement companies after the passage of the Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act of 1994 -- hasn't cracked down on the maker of a food-supplement HGH releaser since 1999. FDA spokeswoman Susan Cruzan said the agency looks at all food-supplement products on a case-by-case basis.
PayPal, the online payment company owned by eBay, doesn't take the same approach. It prevents customers from purchasing HGH-releaser supplements, even if they are legal.
"If the product is marketed and claims to 'act like' or have the same effects as a prescription or illegal drug, we also generally prohibit it," PayPal spokeswoman Charlotte Hills wrote in an e-mail.Comment
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Again...it seems like they're hiding something the more they talk to the media/public. They should chill out with these interviews. He was about to argue with a guy who has 30 years of experience with blood and a graduates degree. Damn! Freddie "the joke coach" Roach.Comment
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Oi
What is next for Paul Spadafora?Comment
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Maybe Freddie is talking about HGH because that's one of the things people say Pacquiao is on.
I have no reason to believe Pacquiao is on steroids, and I'm not gonna believe he is just because his team has handled the situation poorly.
He's never tested positive for any steroid or PED. Regardless of what people may think, he hasn't gotten that much bigger. Sr.'s accusations were baseless and done out of spite. Freddie seems like an emotional guy, if I were him or Pacquiao I'd be pissed too. After over a decade of fighting, accomplishing so much, training hard for every fight, risking your life in the ring, Sr. comes along and says some ****in' foul **** to slander him. I kinda want Pacquiao to take the tests to shut everyone up, but I can see where he's coming from, too: Why should I comply to a man's request who basically insulted me and tried to tarnish years or hard work, I don't need to listen to him, he's not my boss.Comment
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I have a few of his fights on my hard drive, especially when he faced Manfredy. The dude is that skilled. He has lost alot of his athletic ability but he has a really high ring IQ.Comment
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