#1
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| The world No 1 bridge player has been suspended after | failing a drugs test. | | Geir Helgemo, who is Norwegian but represents Monaco in | bridge events, tested positive for synthetic testosterone | and the female fertility drug clomifene at a World Bridge | Series event in Orlando in September. | | After accepting he had breached anti-doping rules, Helgemo | was suspended by the World Bridge Federation (WBF) until 20 | November. He also had all titles, medals and points from | the 2018 World Bridge Series revoked. | ... https://www.theguardian.com/sport/20...ayer-suspended -after-failing-a-drugs-test-geir-helgemo -- sig 32 |
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#2
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David Scheidt wrote:
| | The world No 1 bridge player has been suspended after | failing a drugs test. | | Geir Helgemo, who is Norwegian but represents Monaco in | bridge events, tested positive for synthetic testosterone | and the female fertility drug clomifene at a World Bridge | Series event in Orlando in September. | | After accepting he had breached anti-doping rules, Helgemo | was suspended by the World Bridge Federation (WBF) until 20 | November. He also had all titles, medals and points from | the 2018 World Bridge Series revoked. | ... https://www.theguardian.com/sport/20...ayer-suspended -after-failing-a-drugs-test-geir-helgemo Interestingly, the articles mentioned that the substances he was taking were not performance enhancing in terms of his ability to play bridge, but because the World Bridge Federation complies by WADA rules, he got nailed. Seems a bit unfair for the guy. |
#3
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On Saturday, March 2, 2019 at 1:10:13 PM UTC-5, Ralph Barone wrote:
David Scheidt wrote: | | The world No 1 bridge player has been suspended after | failing a drugs test. | | Geir Helgemo, who is Norwegian but represents Monaco in | bridge events, tested positive for synthetic testosterone | and the female fertility drug clomifene at a World Bridge | Series event in Orlando in September. | | After accepting he had breached anti-doping rules, Helgemo | was suspended by the World Bridge Federation (WBF) until 20 | November. He also had all titles, medals and points from | the 2018 World Bridge Series revoked. | ... https://www.theguardian.com/sport/20...ayer-suspended -after-failing-a-drugs-test-geir-helgemo Interestingly, the articles mentioned that the substances he was taking were not performance enhancing in terms of his ability to play bridge, but because the World Bridge Federation complies by WADA rules, he got nailed. Seems a bit unfair for the guy. Yeah, kinda like a guy getting DQd for not having a bar plug _after_ the race. |
#4
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Zen Cycle wrote:
:On Saturday, March 2, 2019 at 1:10:13 PM UTC-5, Ralph Barone wrote: : David Scheidt wrote: : | : | The world No 1 bridge player has been suspended after : | failing a drugs test. : | : | Geir Helgemo, who is Norwegian but represents Monaco in : | bridge events, tested positive for synthetic testosterone : | and the female fertility drug clomifene at a World Bridge : | Series event in Orlando in September. : | : | After accepting he had breached anti-doping rules, Helgemo : | was suspended by the World Bridge Federation (WBF) until 20 : | November. He also had all titles, medals and points from : | the 2018 World Bridge Series revoked. : | ... : : https://www.theguardian.com/sport/20...ayer-suspended : -after-failing-a-drugs-test-geir-helgemo : : : Interestingly, the articles mentioned that the substances he was taking : were not performance enhancing in terms of his ability to play bridge, but : because the World Bridge Federation complies by WADA rules, he got nailed. : Seems a bit unfair for the guy. There's some evidence that testosterone improves cogntive performance. And whether it does or not, there are people who beliee it does. Clomifene potentiates testosterone. I don't believe dopers. :Yeah, kinda like a guy getting DQd for not having a bar plug _after_ the race. -- sig 20 |
#5
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On Tue, 5 Mar 2019 04:10:14 +0000 (UTC), David Scheidt
wrote: Zen Cycle wrote: :On Saturday, March 2, 2019 at 1:10:13 PM UTC-5, Ralph Barone wrote: : David Scheidt wrote: : | : | The world No 1 bridge player has been suspended after : | failing a drugs test. : | : | Geir Helgemo, who is Norwegian but represents Monaco in : | bridge events, tested positive for synthetic testosterone : | and the female fertility drug clomifene at a World Bridge : | Series event in Orlando in September. : | : | After accepting he had breached anti-doping rules, Helgemo : | was suspended by the World Bridge Federation (WBF) until 20 : | November. He also had all titles, medals and points from : | the 2018 World Bridge Series revoked. : | ... : : https://www.theguardian.com/sport/20...ayer-suspended : -after-failing-a-drugs-test-geir-helgemo : : : Interestingly, the articles mentioned that the substances he was taking : were not performance enhancing in terms of his ability to play bridge, but : because the World Bridge Federation complies by WADA rules, he got nailed. : Seems a bit unfair for the guy. There's some evidence that testosterone improves cogntive performance. And whether it does or not, there are people who beliee it does. Clomifene potentiates testosterone. I don't believe dopers. :Yeah, kinda like a guy getting DQd for not having a bar plug _after_ the race. But where do you draw the line? After all elderly folks are sometimes prescribed male hormones particularly after an accident to enhance their body's ability to heal. Aspirin is a drug, in the sense that it is not a natural part of the body. And the rules change so an individual that has been taking a "drug" for several years suddenly become legally disqualified as the drug gets added to the latest list. See https://www.theguardian.com/sport/20...en-2016-tennis -- Cheers, John B. |
#6
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On Tuesday, March 5, 2019 at 3:10:42 AM UTC-5, John B. Slocomb wrote:
On Tue, 5 Mar 2019 04:10:14 +0000 (UTC), David Scheidt wrote: Zen Cycle wrote: :On Saturday, March 2, 2019 at 1:10:13 PM UTC-5, Ralph Barone wrote: : David Scheidt wrote: : | : | The world No 1 bridge player has been suspended after : | failing a drugs test. : | : | Geir Helgemo, who is Norwegian but represents Monaco in : | bridge events, tested positive for synthetic testosterone : | and the female fertility drug clomifene at a World Bridge : | Series event in Orlando in September. : | : | After accepting he had breached anti-doping rules, Helgemo : | was suspended by the World Bridge Federation (WBF) until 20 : | November. He also had all titles, medals and points from : | the 2018 World Bridge Series revoked. : | ... : : https://www.theguardian.com/sport/20...ayer-suspended : -after-failing-a-drugs-test-geir-helgemo : : : Interestingly, the articles mentioned that the substances he was taking : were not performance enhancing in terms of his ability to play bridge, but : because the World Bridge Federation complies by WADA rules, he got nailed. : Seems a bit unfair for the guy. There's some evidence that testosterone improves cogntive performance. And whether it does or not, there are people who beliee it does. Clomifene potentiates testosterone. I don't believe dopers. :Yeah, kinda like a guy getting DQd for not having a bar plug _after_ the race. But where do you draw the line? After all elderly folks are sometimes prescribed male hormones particularly after an accident to enhance their body's ability to heal. Aspirin is a drug, in the sense that it is not a natural part of the body. And the rules change so an individual that has been taking a "drug" for several years suddenly become legally disqualified as the drug gets added to the latest list. See https://www.theguardian.com/sport/20...en-2016-tennis -- Cheers, John B. I've had the 'where do you draw the line' discussion dozens of times. Is it fair for a high-budget team to have access to the best doctors, therapists, nutritionists, and get daily recovery therapy that doesn't use pharmacology, where a low budget team has to cook spaghetti in the back of their motorhome? I'd say a rider that gets an IV drip with glucose/saline/B complex while getting a massage and having his blood profile monitored and tweaked "legally" has a distinct advantage over the guy that rubs on his own embrocation. IMHO, performance enhancing therapies aren't limited to drugs. |
#7
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Zen Cycle wrote:
On Tuesday, March 5, 2019 at 3:10:42 AM UTC-5, John B. Slocomb wrote: On Tue, 5 Mar 2019 04:10:14 +0000 (UTC), David Scheidt wrote: Zen Cycle wrote: :On Saturday, March 2, 2019 at 1:10:13 PM UTC-5, Ralph Barone wrote: David Scheidt wrote: | | The world No 1 bridge player has been suspended after | failing a drugs test. | | Geir Helgemo, who is Norwegian but represents Monaco in | bridge events, tested positive for synthetic testosterone | and the female fertility drug clomifene at a World Bridge | Series event in Orlando in September. | | After accepting he had breached anti-doping rules, Helgemo | was suspended by the World Bridge Federation (WBF) until 20 | November. He also had all titles, medals and points from | the 2018 World Bridge Series revoked. | ... https://www.theguardian.com/sport/20...ayer-suspended -after-failing-a-drugs-test-geir-helgemo Interestingly, the articles mentioned that the substances he was taking were not performance enhancing in terms of his ability to play bridge, but because the World Bridge Federation complies by WADA rules, he got nailed. Seems a bit unfair for the guy. There's some evidence that testosterone improves cogntive performance. And whether it does or not, there are people who beliee it does. Clomifene potentiates testosterone. I don't believe dopers. :Yeah, kinda like a guy getting DQd for not having a bar plug _after_ the race. But where do you draw the line? After all elderly folks are sometimes prescribed male hormones particularly after an accident to enhance their body's ability to heal. Aspirin is a drug, in the sense that it is not a natural part of the body. And the rules change so an individual that has been taking a "drug" for several years suddenly become legally disqualified as the drug gets added to the latest list. See https://www.theguardian.com/sport/20...en-2016-tennis -- Cheers, John B. I've had the 'where do you draw the line' discussion dozens of times. Is it fair for a high-budget team to have access to the best doctors, therapists, nutritionists, and get daily recovery therapy that doesn't use pharmacology, where a low budget team has to cook spaghetti in the back of their motorhome? I'd say a rider that gets an IV drip with glucose/saline/B complex while getting a massage and having his blood profile monitored and tweaked "legally" has a distinct advantage over the guy that rubs on his own embrocation. IMHO, performance enhancing therapies aren't limited to drugs. Money is perhaps one of the most effective PEDs out there. |
#8
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On Tuesday, March 5, 2019 at 8:37:13 AM UTC-5, Ralph Barone wrote:
Zen Cycle wrote: On Tuesday, March 5, 2019 at 3:10:42 AM UTC-5, John B. Slocomb wrote: On Tue, 5 Mar 2019 04:10:14 +0000 (UTC), David Scheidt wrote: Zen Cycle wrote: :On Saturday, March 2, 2019 at 1:10:13 PM UTC-5, Ralph Barone wrote: David Scheidt wrote: | | The world No 1 bridge player has been suspended after | failing a drugs test. | | Geir Helgemo, who is Norwegian but represents Monaco in | bridge events, tested positive for synthetic testosterone | and the female fertility drug clomifene at a World Bridge | Series event in Orlando in September. | | After accepting he had breached anti-doping rules, Helgemo | was suspended by the World Bridge Federation (WBF) until 20 | November. He also had all titles, medals and points from | the 2018 World Bridge Series revoked. | ... https://www.theguardian.com/sport/20...ayer-suspended -after-failing-a-drugs-test-geir-helgemo Interestingly, the articles mentioned that the substances he was taking were not performance enhancing in terms of his ability to play bridge, but because the World Bridge Federation complies by WADA rules, he got nailed. Seems a bit unfair for the guy. There's some evidence that testosterone improves cogntive performance. And whether it does or not, there are people who beliee it does. Clomifene potentiates testosterone. I don't believe dopers. :Yeah, kinda like a guy getting DQd for not having a bar plug _after_ the race. But where do you draw the line? After all elderly folks are sometimes prescribed male hormones particularly after an accident to enhance their body's ability to heal. Aspirin is a drug, in the sense that it is not a natural part of the body. And the rules change so an individual that has been taking a "drug" for several years suddenly become legally disqualified as the drug gets added to the latest list. See https://www.theguardian.com/sport/20...en-2016-tennis -- Cheers, John B. I've had the 'where do you draw the line' discussion dozens of times. Is it fair for a high-budget team to have access to the best doctors, therapists, nutritionists, and get daily recovery therapy that doesn't use pharmacology, where a low budget team has to cook spaghetti in the back of their motorhome? I'd say a rider that gets an IV drip with glucose/saline/B complex while getting a massage and having his blood profile monitored and tweaked "legally" has a distinct advantage over the guy that rubs on his own embrocation. IMHO, performance enhancing therapies aren't limited to drugs. Money is perhaps one of the most effective PEDs out there. exactly.... |
#9
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On 3/5/2019 8:00 AM, Zen Cycle wrote:
On Tuesday, March 5, 2019 at 3:10:42 AM UTC-5, John B. Slocomb wrote: On Tue, 5 Mar 2019 04:10:14 +0000 (UTC), David Scheidt wrote: Zen Cycle wrote: :On Saturday, March 2, 2019 at 1:10:13 PM UTC-5, Ralph Barone wrote: : David Scheidt wrote: : | : | The world No 1 bridge player has been suspended after : | failing a drugs test. : | : | Geir Helgemo, who is Norwegian but represents Monaco in : | bridge events, tested positive for synthetic testosterone : | and the female fertility drug clomifene at a World Bridge : | Series event in Orlando in September. : | : | After accepting he had breached anti-doping rules, Helgemo : | was suspended by the World Bridge Federation (WBF) until 20 : | November. He also had all titles, medals and points from : | the 2018 World Bridge Series revoked. : | ... : : https://www.theguardian.com/sport/20...ayer-suspended : -after-failing-a-drugs-test-geir-helgemo : : : Interestingly, the articles mentioned that the substances he was taking : were not performance enhancing in terms of his ability to play bridge, but : because the World Bridge Federation complies by WADA rules, he got nailed. : Seems a bit unfair for the guy. There's some evidence that testosterone improves cogntive performance. And whether it does or not, there are people who beliee it does. Clomifene potentiates testosterone. I don't believe dopers. :Yeah, kinda like a guy getting DQd for not having a bar plug _after_ the race. But where do you draw the line? After all elderly folks are sometimes prescribed male hormones particularly after an accident to enhance their body's ability to heal. Aspirin is a drug, in the sense that it is not a natural part of the body. And the rules change so an individual that has been taking a "drug" for several years suddenly become legally disqualified as the drug gets added to the latest list. See https://www.theguardian.com/sport/20...en-2016-tennis -- Cheers, John B. I've had the 'where do you draw the line' discussion dozens of times. Is it fair for a high-budget team to have access to the best doctors, therapists, nutritionists, and get daily recovery therapy that doesn't use pharmacology, where a low budget team has to cook spaghetti in the back of their motorhome? I'd say a rider that gets an IV drip with glucose/saline/B complex while getting a massage and having his blood profile monitored and tweaked "legally" has a distinct advantage over the guy that rubs on his own embrocation. IMHO, performance enhancing therapies aren't limited to drugs. This is part of the reason I've never been interested in spectator sports. Casual competition among individuals is fun. But when things get organized into serious leagues, weirdness arises. And once there's a chance at making real money, all hell breaks loose. I've never seen a reason to give those guys, and that system, any of my attention. -- - Frank Krygowski |
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