this time, it's jameel mccline http://www.nydailynews.com/sports/more_sports/2007/10/05/2007-10-05_mccline_steps_into_steroid_ring.html
This isn't much of a surprise...McCline was with Mazan Ali...he's the guy who supplied 'Nando with his 'roids prior to the De La Hoya fight.
yeh, i was gonna say he was rumored to have been roided up as far back as before his meltdown (a/k/a, showing his true colors) against Wlad five years ago. In fact, I remember that his first fight back in 2003, he was a little heavier but a lot flabbier than the period between Grant and Wlad fights.
Look at McCline when he fights in a state that doesn't test for Steroids. Then look at his body in states that do. Same for Tua.
places like Michigan, Arkansas, Oklahoma. and testing in some states are not as good, like Florida. Look at Mcline's body in those states and then look at his body when he fights in others that test. He looks like shit
:: :: :: Glad to see you have a comprehensive understanding of steroids used in the 1950s. It's a good thing you don't cover sports. Oh, wait. You do.
I know right. Cause we all know that Lance Armstrong was muscle bound and made him tired. What about Floyd Landis he was huge like Bob Sapp. All I gotta say is that everyone cheats in sports. It's just a luck of the draw that they don't get caught. I'll Holla 5000
There's cheating and there's cheating. Steroids are the type of cheating that is inexcusable and should be kept out of the sport as much as is reasonably possible.
I think that against really dirty fighters like Holyfield, Hopkins and Hatton, you should be able to use steroids, just to even things out.
I think that you are the only person on this forum who is/was a pro athlete. What is your experience? My guess is that most pro athletes do something to enhance their performance, and are basically guinea pigs for the supplement/drug manufacturers. I'm not implying that the ability isn't there naturally, but pro athletes are almost freakish today, and are clearly quite different from the average person in ways that diet and training can't account for.