Friday, February 8, 2013

EDM Extract - Peptides & Platitudes



"Pssst. Over here. Yeah you. Wanna buy some peptides? What are they? I dunno. But everyone's talking about them. They're all the rage."

Nah Seriously, what a few days it's been in Australian sport. Particularly the two main football codes in the AFL and the NRL with relevations on a daily basis of new-age drug, hormone and supplement taking with all sorts of blurred lines in regards to what is illegal and what is OK. To be honest, I've struggled to keep up with it all and haven't quite got my head around it yet, but here's a brief summary for your reading pleasure.

It all started on Tuesday when the Essendon Football Club announced they'd recently learnt that some of their sports science practices from alst year might not have been completely legal or ethical. It was an extraordinary press conference in that no details were offered up but there were plenty of platitudes along the lines of 'we'll cooperate fully with the investigation' and 'I had no idea at the time' from the Chairman, Senior Coach and Medical Officers.

We've since learnt players were often taken offsite by the club's sports scientists to be injected with 'supplements' and players were asked to sign waivers to offload any liability from the club despite the fact the club was telling them everything was kosher. Now of course I know nothing of the inner workings of the Essendon Football Club, but it seems extraordinary that the Senior Coach and Medical Officials in particular didn't know about this. And the idea of making players sign waiver forms certainly looks like a head office / legal area thing to do so the Chairman not knowing either is suprising.

Last year certainly was a rollercoaster ride for Essendon in 2012 on the playing field anyway. The players looked like they'd really bulked up over the offseason and they were at top of the ladder at 8-3 at the halfway mark of the season. It all fell apart after that though and they managed only three more wins to finish outside the finals. They suffered a horrific injury toll with players going down with soft tissue injuries on a weekly basis and it was widely thought that the weights-focus of the offseason was to blame for all the hammies, calf and groin tears that occurred. You know, Jake the Muss and all that. "Too much weights, not enough speedwork".

Anyway, other AFL Clubs in Geelong and Gold Coast have since been mentioned with the sports scientist in question having worked as a consultant with the Suns and the Cats coming out and saying they have some concerns about their own practices as well. Every other club was no doubt hurrying away and checking their procedures and asking some hard questions of their respective sports scientists.

The NRL wasn't immune either with Manly being put in the spotlight with the same sports scientist having worked with them during their premiership years under Des Hasler. We'd previously heard stories of players injected with calf blood and the like but apparently lactate-reducing concoctions and DNA testing of muscle fibres were also prevalent around the club at the time. And then today, we've heard of vials and needles being found stashed in the home dressing rooms of the Gold Coast Titans at Skilled Stadium.

The legality of any and all of these practices is the big issue with no-one quite being sure what is illegal, what is legal and what the boundaries are. From what I've seen anyway. The thing is, all of this has come about with not one player testing positive for illegal use of a substance. That obviously brings into question the current list of banned substances, the current methods of testing players, and the current protocols that are meant to ensure the rules are being followed.

And all this was then wrapped up with the release of a Australian Crime Commission (ACC) report yesterday that found evidence of players taking performance enhancing drugs; criminals being involved in the trafficing of these drugs to players; players being fed quick-metabolising substances which are hard to detect; doctors writing scripts in false names for drugs to be supplied by compounding pharmacies; and anti-ageing clinics having links to criminal groups to obtain and distribute performance enhancing substances.

It's all very murky and there's obviously plenty of shocking relevations that need to be further investigated, reviewed and addressed. The links with criminal groups is a big concern obviously and all the sporting organisations need to work with the ACC to stamp it out. Players who knew they were taking banned substances and doctors / sports scientists who knew the substances they were pushing are banned need to face the appropriate consequences as well.

Both the AFL and NRL have acted pretty swiftly in response actually, with the AFL already having an Action Plan announced last night including a major beefing up of their integrity unit and NRL officials appointing a former judge to investigate and work with the ACC. But you have to be a little suspicious of any of this turning into multiple life bans or court appearances. Even the ACC, a crime enforcement entity with the powers of a standing Royal Commission, has refused to name names so they must have some concerns about the 'beyond reasonable doubt' nature of the evidence they've obtained.

It hasn't stopped the opinion-makers though and we've had no shortage of cheap headlines proclaiming it all as the blackest days in Australian sport ever and the football codes as being in crisis with their integrity in shreds as a result. There's also been some pious rants about the nature of modern sport and all the money involved ruining everything. Like we could go back to the grand old amateur days where apparently all was well with the world and our heroes were pure as the driven snow.

All in all, it's been a pretty big few days for sport in this country. Understatement of the century perhaps. It's certainly been the strangest off-season period I've ever seen for the football codes with all sorts of coverage, not just this latest drugs drama, being front-page news and not even a footy has been kicked in anger yet to commence the 2013 seasons.

It might prompt the AFL and NRL to bring those seasons forward and kick them off next weekend the way things are going. Just to get the actual playing of football in the news. At least there's no worries about my AFL team, Melbourne, being involved in all this. Whatever they were taking last year, it certainly wasn't performance enhancing.

EDM.

No comments:

Post a Comment