Originally posted by NORMNEALON
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Floyd's Illegal IV; A Prefight Ritual Or A One-Time Thing?
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Originally posted by dibzvincent143 View Postwhen the news broke out NSAC declared they didn’t know anything about it and were totally upset.
the next day they changed their stance. That was fkn fishy even if were dumb as hell.
Even if IV was legal back then, the amount floyd needed was way beyond necessary according to doctors and experts alike.
drinking water would have been better.
And why was it applied for TUE 18 days after the fight wazzup with that.
The USADA doping control officer shouldn't be forced in the heat of the moment to approve or disapprove of any medical treatment. That would be a disaster for that to be the policy. So the policy is that the athlete has X amount of days to submit the proper paperwork and medical information for a panel of doctors and experts to research and investigate.
I don't know how many days you have to submit the paperwork and medical information, I would assume it's at least 30 days though. 18 days is nothing unusual to submit a TUE. Your doctors and lawyers and all that need time to gather all of the information, write their brief arguing your side, etc. All that stuff takes time.
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Originally posted by HeadShots View Postis this guy mentally ill?
As was already publicly reported in May of this year by the Nevada State Athletic Commission (NSAC), Mr. Mayweather applied for and was granted a The****utic Use Exemption (TUE) by USADA for an IV infusion of saline and vitamins that was administered prior to his May 2 fight against Manny Pacquiao. Mr. Mayweather’s use of the IV was not prohibited under the NSAC rules at that time and would not be a violation of the NSAC rules today. Nonetheless, because Mr. Mayweather was voluntarily taking part in a USADA program, and therefore subject to the rules of the WADA Code, he took the additional step of applying for a TUE after the IV infusion was administered in order remain in compliance with the USADA program. Although Mr. Mayweather’s application was not approved until after his fight with Mr. Pacquiao and all tests results were reported, Mr. Mayweather did disclose the infusion to USADA in advance of the IV being administered to him. Furthermore, once the TUE was granted, the NSAC and Mr. Pacquiao were immediately notified even though the practice is not prohibited under NSAC rules.
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Originally posted by PAC-BOY View Postthe substances contained in the IV were not banned by WADA, whose standards USADA says it follows, the fact that they were given intravenously was not allowed.
the IV -- which reportedly included a 250-milliliter mixture of saline and multivitamins and a 500-milliliter mixture of saline and Vitamin C. WADA rules do not allow intravenous infusions or injections of more than 50 milliliters per six hours "except for those legitimately received in the course of hospital admissions, surgical procedures, or clinical investigations.
WADA bans such injections and infusions because they can be used to "dilute or mask the presence of another substance."
and the IV was administered at Floyd's house, not in a medical facility, and wasn't brought to WADA or Commisions attention at the time in which was totally unacceptable
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Originally posted by Galactic Larry View Postyet WADA nor The Nevada athletic commission said he did anything wrong nor reported he did anything wrong
Floyd Mayweather received an exemption for the IV from the United States Anti-Doping Agency three weeks after the fight, according to the report. However, the Nevada State Athletic Commission said USADA was not authorized to grant an exemption
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Originally posted by WBC WBA IBF View PostFloyd's IV wasn't illegal. It's really hard to take the haters seriously when they lie about such basic facts.
When an IV infusion is administered to an athlete, the following criteria should be fulfilled:
1. a clearly defined diagnosis;
2. supportive evidence that no permitted alternative treatment can be used;
3. the treatment has been ordered by a physician and administered by qualified medical
personnel in an appropriate medical setting; 4. adequate medical records of the treatment.
The use of IV infusions in sport is commonly linked with rehydration after exhaustive effort, and this situation is arguably the major cause of debate. It must be understood that the use of IV fluid replacement following exercise and/or acute weight reduction to correct mild to moderate dehydration is not clinically indicated nor substantiated by the medical literature. There is a well-established body of scientific evidence to confirm that oral rehydration is the preferred the****utic choice, potentially even more effective than IV infusion3-15.
4.2 Unless one of the exceptions set out in Article 4.3 applies, an Athlete who needs to Use a Prohibited Substance or Prohibited Method for The****utic reasons must obtain a TUE prior to Using or Possessing the substance or method in question.Last edited by Shape up; 01-18-2020, 10:17 PM.
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Originally posted by WBC WBA IBF View PostHauser's hit piece deliberately misled the public and therefore made the NSAC look bad in the eyes of the public. So the NSAC acted indignant to save face.
They acted indignant for a day to calm down the public and then of course had to admit Mayweather didn't do anything wrong.
Wrong. Doctors and experts are the ones that evaluate the TUE without knowing who the athlete is. They determined the use was legitimate. 750ml is the equivalent of a small bottle of soda. USADA was with Mayweather the entire day, took samples before and after, witnessed his condition, witnessed the IV being administered. Everything was done on the up and up.
Are you a doctor? Were you privy to Floyd's condition? What if he had diarrhea the night before the biggest fight of his life? You have no idea what the best treatment option was.
USADA was notified of the IV *before* it was administered. USADA witnessed Floyd's condition, witnessed the paramedics being called, witnessed the paramedics administering the IV, etc.
The USADA doping control officer shouldn't be forced in the heat of the moment to approve or disapprove of any medical treatment. That would be a disaster for that to be the policy. So the policy is that the athlete has X amount of days to submit the proper paperwork and medical information for a panel of doctors and experts to research and investigate.
I don't know how many days you have to submit the paperwork and medical information, I would assume it's at least 30 days though. 18 days is nothing unusual to submit a TUE. Your doctors and lawyers and all that need time to gather all of the information, write their brief arguing your side, etc. All that stuff takes time.
So the NSAC were notified or not??? Because they released their initial statement and said they were upset and weren’t notified when they should be.
So they lied the next day that they were???
Nahhh!! Making diarrhea bs, if he had then we’d be reading about it by now.
So you are justifying everything base on usada being there? When that organization is clearly under floyd and haymon’s pocket???
So were just gonna turn a blind eye and play were dumb that we don’t know how to read between the lines and connect the dots that the amount floyd used is exactly then same as Lance armstrong’s technique??? And believe everything usada say?? IV masks the findings, is there nothing to it? Eventhough let’s say everything was done right?
Like I said it’s fishy as hell and we are just the ones trying to defend it and making sense to it.
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Originally posted by Roadblock View PostAnd it exactly happened when Floyd stopped Hatton, it blew his little world to pieces, he disappeared for a long while and returned a Floyd hater, I remember the sht he posted about Hatton.
Floyd has head fckd him real good !
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