Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

amazing HBO special on USADA / dehydrated theme! Blood n Urine! Floyd Conte Mosley

Collapse
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • #71
    Originally posted by travestyny View Post
    So you agree he admit it. Thank you. WHy the **** do you think 6 of his samples came back dirty?

    Oh yea. Contamination. LMAO.


    Clown. You're dismissed.


    The ownage in this thread is amazing. Totally got bodied. Just leave that dude alone. Not even worth the energy anymore.

    Comment


    • #72
      Originally posted by !!WAR CANELO!! View Post
      750ML of mystery MIX damn why mayweather, you was respected till you tranish your own legacy oh well another one bite the dust.
      In the real world....

      When you walk into any hospital....

      When people are rehydrating with an IV...

      That is... a bag of water hanging from a pole...

      The normal amounts are 500-2000ml...

      if it weren't the case..it would defeat the purpose of an IV! ****tails exist in the medical world too. 100% standard practice for IV hydration.

      W4hen a random person feels tired, not a boxer, and says "I feel dehydrated" and drinks a glass of water it is not the same as a professional athlete who trains hard.

      Comment


      • #73
        He admitted it AFTER his whole team gave statements against him, he has never been prosecuted over any failed tests dickhead, he was a huge advocate for his sport to be clean while behind the scenes he was pumping pecs in left right and centre, sounds like floyds blueprint

        Comment


        • #74
          Originally posted by radioraheem View Post


          The ownage in this thread is amazing. Totally got bodied. Just leave that dude alone. Not even worth the energy anymore.
          Yep, I'm done with it. I hope this dude is just trolling. If not.....he has no hope in life.

          Comment


          • #75
            Originally posted by Shape up View Post
            The evidence presented in the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency's 202-page report on Lance Armstrong's alleged years of doping, scheming, pushing and evading is, according to its authors, "beyond strong." Even so, the case against Armstrong doesn't involve any definitive failed drug tests, a fact that the former seven-time Tour de France winner has long used to shield his claims to innocence.

            So if Armstrong is the inveterate doper the USADA claims he is, how did he manage to avoid an unambiguous positive test during more than a decade of pro cycling?

            Below is a rundown of the doping practices the USADA accuses Armstrong of using, and an explanation of how, in each case, he might have covered his tracks for so long. [How Did Armstrong Get Busted?]

            Advertisement

            Erythropoietin (EPO): A synthetic version of this naturally occurring hormone is used by cheating athletes to boost red blood cell counts, a change that temporarily supercharges endurance by increasing muscles' oxygen-carrying capacity. Before 2000, no test existed to distinguish the synthetic version of the hormone from its natural counterpart, so as long as athletes took doses that would keep their hematocrit (a measure of the volume percentage of blood made up of red blood cells) in a plausible range (below 50 percent), they could use this drug with impunity. And the report alleges that Armstrong's pre-2000 team did just that, fueling its 1999 Tour de France win.

            But the USADA also claims that Armstrong's abuse of EPO didn't stop after the introduction of a urine test capable of detecting the drug in 2000; it merely took a more covert form. Conspiring doctors, the report alleges, instructed Armstrong and his teammates to inject EPO intravenously (as opposed to subcutaneously, or into an inner layer of skin) and at night, when surprise tests were unlikely. These measures would make it possible for low doses of synthetic EPO to be cleared from a rider's system by the time he woke.

            In situations where EPO tests on recently dosed athletes were unavoidable, team doctors also could have injected saline, or salt water, to dilute a rider's blood and quickly drive down hematocrit. This kind of obfuscating saline injection was a common practice for Armstrong and his team, according to the USADA report.---------------------------- you are a DICKHEAD
            Originally posted by SugarKaineHook View Post
            In the real world....

            When you walk into any hospital....

            When people are rehydrating with an IV...

            That is... a bag of water hanging from a pole...

            The normal amounts are 500-2000ml...

            if it weren't the case..it would defeat the purpose of an IV! ****tails exist in the medical world too. 100% standard practice for IV hydration.

            W4hen a random person feels tired, not a boxer, and says "I feel dehydrated" and drinks a glass of water it is not the same as a professional athlete who trains hard.
            It was after the weigh in, all his HARD work would have finished days before, absolutely no reasonable reason for an IV, WADA states there is no medical evidence backing claims IV will rehydrate better than drinking water unless it's extreme dehydration

            Comment


            • #76
              Originally posted by Shape up View Post
              It was after the weigh in, all his HARD work would have finished days before, absolutely no reasonable reason for an IV, WADA states there is no medical evidence backing claims IV will rehydrate better than drinking water unless it's extreme dehydration
              Rehydrate better? WADA cites medical practices. Dehydration or rehydration processes in the medical world are not exclusive to boxing, nor would the medical world even advocate a sport that specifically relies on weight limit expectations. citing general hydration purposes in the medical world without proper context is easy work in a court room

              Comment


              • #77
                [url]http://www.usada.org/is-it-prohibited-or-dangerous-for-athletes-using-iv-infusions-for-re-hydration-and-recovery/
                Last edited by Shape up; 10-09-2016, 04:52 AM. Reason: link not working

                Comment


                • #78
                  Originally posted by SugarKaineHook View Post
                  In the real world....

                  When you walk into any hospital....

                  When people are rehydrating with an IV...

                  That is... a bag of water hanging from a pole...

                  The normal amounts are 500-2000ml...

                  if it weren't the case..it would defeat the purpose of an IV! ****tails exist in the medical world too. 100% standard practice for IV hydration.

                  W4hen a random person feels tired, not a boxer, and says "I feel dehydrated" and drinks a glass of water it is not the same as a professional athlete who trains hard.
                  ummmmmm this is the boxing world, and mayweather didnt walk into hospital and NSAC have rules and 750ml is over the legal amount they allow.

                  Why mayweather why you tainted your legacy like this now you lumped in with all the rest of them

                  Tarver
                  Bey
                  Jones
                  Mosley
                  Berto
                  Love
                  Hall

                  etc etc etc

                  Comment


                  • #79
                    http://www.usada.org/is-it-prohibite...-and-recovery/

                    Comment


                    • #80
                      Originally posted by radioraheem View Post


                      The ownage in this thread is amazing. Totally got bodied. Just leave that dude alone. Not even worth the energy anymore.
                      Yeah, I have owned him the whole way through, hope I've cleared a lot of falicies up for some posters

                      Comment

                      Working...
                      X
                      TOP