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  1. #1
    kblunt is offline New Member
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    Running and cycling

    I'm very new to steroids , i have never taken them but i have a friend who got huge in like 8 weeks so it got me very interested. I enjoy distance running (12-18 miles) and cycling so i have been reading a lot but the only thing i find about steroids and running is ben johnson. so if there are any runner/cyclers out there any advise on a steroid that works well, how steroids would effect my running, or what sacrifces i would have to make in my cardio to take the steroids.

    Thanks
    Kevin

  2. #2
    dec11's Avatar
    dec11 is offline 'everything louder than everything else'
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    Quote Originally Posted by kblunt View Post
    I'm very new to steroids , i have never taken them but i have a friend who got huge in like 8 weeks so it got me very interested. I enjoy distance running (12-18 miles) and cycling so i have been reading a lot but the only thing i find about steroids and running is ben johnson. so if there are any runner/cyclers out there any advise on a steroid that works well, how steroids would effect my running, or what sacrifces i would have to make in my cardio to take the steroids.

    Thanks
    Kevin
    thts because 100m sprint is an anaerobic event, requiring a short powerful burst, distance running and steroids arent compatiable

  3. #3
    TITANIUM's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by declan11;4998***
    thts because 100m sprint is an anaerobic event, requiring a short powerful burst, distance running and steroids arent compatible
    That's inaccurate.

    The Tour De France is checked all the time for gear.

    Some get busted for it.

    Some just do blood doping and such.

    Interesting question though.

    Best

    T

  4. #4
    TITANIUM's Avatar
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  5. #5
    dec11's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by TITANIUM View Post
    That's inaccurate.

    The Tour De France is checked all the time for gear.

    Some get busted for it.

    Some just do blood doping and such.

    Interesting question though.

    Best

    T
    actually its not T, tour de france is drug tested for stimulants, its not AAS any1 gets banned for

  6. #6
    TITANIUM's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by declan11 View Post
    actually its not T, tour de france is drug tested for stimulants


    I raced PROFESSIONALLY, so, I know it is for a fact.

    Best

    T

  7. #7
    dec11's Avatar
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    what cyclists have been banned for test? as in distance events
    Last edited by dec11; 12-23-2009 at 01:15 PM.

  8. #8
    kblunt is offline New Member
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    hey t your link didn't work maybe you could try it again. what was in the blog?

  9. #9
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    Britannica Blog via RSS Posts by Gary Gaffney via RSS Print
    The Dour de France: Steroids & Cycling’s Top Event
    Gary Gaffney - July 5th, 2007

    On the eve of the 2007 Tour de France, pro cycling’s crown jewel event, the sport appears as settled as Hamlet’s royal court. Even as this venerable race opens in London, England, for the first time in history, there is no royal holder of the 2006 yellow jersey traditionally worn by the Tour victor.

    The once apparent winner of Tour 2006, Floyd Landis, begins his own tour, a book tour promoting his defense/book, Positively False: The Real Story of How I Won the Tour de France. Landis, apparently disqualified as the winner of the 2006 Tour because of disputed lab results that indicated synthetic testosterone, spent the past year defending his argument by raising and spending millions of dollars to take his case to the public. The American rider defended himself against the US Anti-doping Agency in an arbitration hearing in California.

    The alternatives in the Landis case sum up as either:

    •Landis used a synthetic anabolic steroid in his miraculous comeback to win the 2006 tour and now is deceptive about his innocence; or
    •The chemistry lab the Tour uses cannot be trusted to produce reliable results in determining blood doping
    Either unsavory alternative hurts the sport. The results of the Landis-USADA hearing have not been announced; whatever the outcome, an aggrieved loser will be expected to appeal to the International Court of Sport Arbitration, dragging out the process even longer. The cycling world may know the winner of the 2007 Tour de France before it knows the winner of the 2006 Tour.

    Timed for the eve of the 2007 tour, another critical voice published a book examining legendary winners of the past. Controversial UK writer David Walsh, in From Lance to Landis, lays out the evidence that cycling icon Lance Armstrong doped his way to seven Tour de France titles. Walsh’s evidence builds on his earlier French book (L.A. Confidential), where he relies on eye-witness accounts from Armstrong’s masseuse, friends, and the rider’s close association with doping doctor Michele Ferrari.

    In Europe, Operation Puerto — the long running Euro version of American’s BALCO — investigating doping conspiracies in pro cycling slowly moves forward. On the eve of the 2006 Tour, a number of top competitors became disqualified because of involvement in Puerto. On the eve of Tour 2007, another huge bomb from the scandal threatens to explode. This weekend (July 1) German rider Joerg Jaksche became the first rider to admit blood doping supplied by the central shadowy figure in the Puerto probe - Spanish doctor Eufemiano Fuentes. Jaksche claimed “everybody is doing it.”

    The wheels fell off other elite cyclists in the intervening year between Tour 2006 and Tour 2007:

    •Ivan Basso, an Italian cyclist, arguably the best active cyclist in the world, was suspended from competition for 2 years after he confessed he considered doping
    •Olympic gold medal winner German Jan Ullrich retired rather than face scrutiny for his doping past
    •2007 Tour favorite, Alejandro Valverde, faces new drug-cheating accusations
    •Italian pro Alessandro Petacchi faces an inquiry in Rome this week
    •Danilo Di Luca, 31, the winner of the 2007 Giro de Italy and involved in the older “Oil for Drugs” scandal, will again be on the sidelines in 2007
    •Top German cyclist Matthias Kessler, who failed a dope test this year, and Eddy Mazzoleni, third in the Giro, won’t be at the 2007 Tour
    •Alexandre Vinokourov, a Kazakh, comes under suspicion for working with long suspected drug doctor Michele Ferrari
    •1996 Tour winner Bjarne Riss admitted doping, which promoted Tour officials to strip him of the crown.
    There have been so many doping accusations and admissions that the International Olympic Committee has even needed to reassure the public that cycling remains an Olympic event.

    Disturbed officials, meanwhile, are pleading for a clean 2007 Tour. The governing body of cycling, the International Cycling Union (UCI), asked 600 pro cyclists to sign off on a new anti-doping charter. Tour de France director Christian Prudhomme said the race will go to the Court of Arbitration for Sport to reject riders who refuse to sign before the race begins. In another startling move, the UCI announced that 6-7 high-risk riders have already been targeted for anti-doping tests (let’s call it proactive drug-cheat prevention).

    Thus, a major question looms over the 2007 Tour, a question that through the years looms larger than the individual questions concerning Lance Armstrong’s possible doping, or Floyd Landis’ testosterone fueled recovery in 2006, or the ongoing Operation Puerto investigation, or the mistakes of the French LNDD lab to detect doping. That question concerns the very integrity of the Tour and of pro cycling in general:

    Can pro cycling change from a “blood sport” with omnipresent drug-cheating to a clean sport that honors the spirit of Olympic competition?



    Best

    T

  10. #10
    PO OFFICER's Avatar
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    Look into winstrol , I heard that increased your stamina.

  11. #11
    kblunt is offline New Member
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    thanks i read some more on winstrol i will be looking into it

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