Bu-wa-ha-haaa
NO WAY ANYONE recovers from a TORN muscle that fast, PERIOD, and I won`t even get into his alleged involvement in double-murder making him either an accessory to or an actual killer.
Why fight it?
>>Ray Lewis !?<<
Top thug on a team full of thugs. They are taught to play dirty and they do play dirty.
As for his drug use, all I can say is karma would suggest he ends up like Lyle Alzado (God rest his soul).
Only when the soviets and others started doing so to did we start trying to “crack down” on them... but the real truth is we were only cracking down on the old ones others were using while constantly staying ahead of the testing curve to continue our fake dominance.
There is nothing in the American DNA which would explain our dominance, or that explains the sudden magical leap black athlete's made in the 20’th century.
If you are referring to the incident outside a Buckhead nightclub nobody saw nothin. :-)
Kinda confusing there.
Is recovering from serious injury using steroidals the same thing as a healthy person jacking up? Are steroids for asthma PEDs?
Recovery from appendicitis and many other ailments is miraculous compared to a generation ago.
Sometimes focus has to narrow to make a point.
I think the staggering amounts of money made by the NFL and the TV networks has corrupted the sport. Nobody wants to bite the hand that feeds them, so what once was seen as sports journalism has evolved into sports promotion. Almost everybody is happy with the status quo, even the fans.
If you watch a replay of a classic NFL game from up to about 1980, even the best players look skinny when compared to today’s athletes. It’s even more startling if you look at the change in college football players. Yet the announcers and journalists are reluctant to ask why the players are so much bigger than before.
There have been professional athletes for thousands of years, going back to ancient Greece. But starting in the late 1970’s, modern professional athletes started to get huge. It probably started with bodybuilders and weight lifters, then NFL and MLB. If it could have been accomplished simply with diet and exercise, we would have seen it before the 1970’s.
Americans used to joke about the obvious use of drugs by Olympic athletes from the Soviet Union and the German Democratic Republic. But now everybody does it. Even if leagues and governing agencies get serious about stopping it, there’s a good chance the drug manufacturers will stay one step ahead of everybody else, either by making their drugs difficult to detect, or by inventing new ones that have not yet been banned.
The sheer size and speed of today’s NFL players is one of the reasons they suffer so many concussions and other serious injuries.
Don’t care. The 2005 Andro ban was one of the dumbest pieces of unConstitutional legislation since the GCA of 68.
Oops. I thought this was another Menendez thread.