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dutrows last statment is very funny..watch the performance of his horses now....then after,,,,,,
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I'm curious Bruce, considering how sensitive you are to others saying things that you construe as anti-Arab ( and you may be right about this ), how is this not considered at least a quasi-slur against Italian-Americans? |
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And I use plenty of hair product. I'm a Wildroot man. |
Much ado about nothing, unless they are saying that they will no longer be using the "maintenance" medications like Gastroguard, Clenbuterol, Bute, adequan, etc. (many of which Dutrow references in the article), on their horses. As Chuck notes above, "hay, oats and water" is really a misnomer. They won't get any race-day medication; with the exception of Lasix, they can't now (and they will continue to use that drug). Isn't this them just publicly saying that they are going to play by the current (and future, as it relates to steroids) rules?
Same thing with respect to Iavarone saying that they will be "steroid free" by October 1. Hasn't the CHRB already said that horses running in the Breeders' Cup will have had to been off them for at least 30-45 days before the Breeders' Cup or they risk a steroids "positive"? |
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I wish there was some way to wave a magic wand and suddenly make the public understand that the problem is undetectable designer drugs....and not the stuff everyone can use. While I am sure a case could be made that there is abuse of allowable medications it is the undetectable stuff that is far and away damaging the game the most.
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It is alot like 'the cream' and 'the clear'. These were hyped up by the media. I understand that concept that humans and horses are not equal, but people are not talking about creatine, which I think is still allowed in MLB. MLB is 'performance enhancement free' not drug free..... |
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Make no mistake about it, they will still be using the designer stuff and will cry out in complete shock if one of their "drug free" horses tests positive. Undetectable designer drugs are in all sports. The only thing that is going to make them detectable is loads of money dumped into improving the testing. The problem is that nobody thinks it is a big enough problem to invest that money. Also, who will pay for it? Once a test comes out to detect a drug, the drug makers are already on two or three generations down the line making new drugs that can't be detected. This will probably never change unless there is an incredible breakthrough in drug testing. |
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when does patrick b.get out of the penalty box...at least he used something of this earth...
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Considering Patrick is a friend of mine, and someone I have talked to quite a lot, I can safely say listening devices would be useless with him. |
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..................:$: |
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