VADA I say their tests are purposely 15 years behind the sh it they are using now. juicers always ahead of the testers that long. only the r etards get "caught"
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Comments Thread For: Korobov: I'm Clean; Not Worried About Charlo's Missed VADA Test
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Originally posted by filup79 View PostHow did they not know what? That they were getting tested that day? Are people too ****** to realise what random means? Random means any day, any time without the fighter knowing they're getting tested. VADA doesn't schedule an appointment a week in advance so the Charlos know they are getting tested on a certain date and time. The Charlos failed to notify VADA they were going out of town.
How did they not know they had to inform vada of their supposed promotional event? Not possible.
We done forgot!
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Originally posted by BeLikeWater View PostThat's like saying you're allowed two crimes before going away for life. Not true, you can go away for life the first time depending on the judges determination. Same with vada. They will determine his guilt which should be easy to prove. How did they not know? It's their million dollar career for God's sake. No doubt daddy Al is gonna grease the wheels for the Cheatin Charlos.
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so is anything being done about that missed test?
imo it should be considered as if you failed it!
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Originally posted by BeLikeWater View PostI agree. Vada has done nothing so far and I don't think daddy Al will allow his card to go to waste... Bribe city.
imo there is no excuse for missing a test you KNOW you are gonna be tested at random.
im not gonna believe the miscommunication excuse either
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Originally posted by Rigpig View PostMeanwhile, after Jarrett Hurd knocked out Jason Welborn on the undercard of Deontay Wilder vs. Tyson Fury at Staples Center on December 1, Jermell Charlo climbed into the ring to challenge Hurd. The two men jawed back and forth with Hurd saying, “Answer the phone. I got the date.?br />
“My phone is always on,?Charlo responded.
Except when a VADA collection officer calls.
ooooohhhhh thats a good one
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Originally posted by Ake-Dawg View PostAgain...are you upset with the rules or the fighter. Everytime someone points out that the fighter is within the rules, you lash out at the rules without calling them into question. You want to believe that the Charlos are cheaters or already do. As such any information that can be considered to support that belief you treat as a smoking gun.
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Originally posted by Bjl12 View PostThe whole point of USADA/WADA/VADA, etc. is R A N D O M drug testing. RANDOM cannot be stressed enough.
When an athlete KNOWS they are being tested there are things they can do to avoid popping for different substances. One might think "well it's steroids/EPO/testosterone/etc. how much can one really do to hide it"? Let one of the most famous bicyclists in the world demonstrate:
- Here's an excerpt regarding Lance Armstrong and his very careful and meticulous doping scandal:
- Nine days into the 2004 Tour de France, the U.S. Postal Service cycling team, led by Lance Armstrong, checked into a hotel near the village of Saint-Léonard-de-Noblat.
- According to one of the U.S. Postal team's most prominent riders at the time, Floyd Landis, one room at the hotel had been set aside for a secret procedure.
- Outside its door, Mr. Landis said, team staff members were stationed at each end of the hall to make sure nobody showed up unannounced. The riders were told before they went into the room not to talk when they got inside, he said. The smoke detectors had been taken down, he said, plastic was taped over the heater and the air-conditioning unit, and anything with a hole in it was taped over. The purpose, Mr. Landis figured, was to obscure the view of any hidden camera.
- The riders on the team who participated in this procedure lay down on the bed, two at a time, Mr. Landis said, with a doctor on each side. Mr. Landis said he got a blood transfusion. He said he also saw Mr. Armstrong and two other team members, George Hincapie and Jos?Luis Rubiera, taking blood. He said he didn't see any other riders getting transfusions that day.
Here's another - very relevant - tactic used by Lance Amrstrong and his team:
- According to the report, Armstrong and the members of the U.S. Postal Service Cycling team became experts on their own blood chemistry. They would dope regularly, but use small amounts, or "micro-doses" which they would take at night so as not to fail a test in the morning.
- If all else failed, Armstrong and his racing team would simply hide from the anti-doping testers. They evaded them by making last-minute travel changes, skipping certain races, alerting each other about unannounced tests through text messages or, according to The New York Times, by simply not answering the knock at the door:
- The simplest was pretending not to be home when the testers arrived. As long as they were in the city they had reported as their locations, the riders found they would not receive a warning for not answering the door.
Hmm..sounds oddly familiar. What do the Charlos do that separate them from their competitors (they haven't faced any elite competition yet anways)? Well they are very strong and appear to have very good stamina.
What do PED's specifically enhance? Strength and stamina.
Looks pretty, pretty bad. Which is why RANDOM testing is so important in detecting cheaters
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