I would guess most of any product you find at any "health store" in the United States would be an issue. This article will help describe the trouble supplements can get athletes into: http://www.ncaa.org/sport-science-in...ity-and-health
I would guess most of any product you find at any "health store" in the United States would be an issue. This article will help describe the trouble supplements can get athletes into: http://www.ncaa.org/sport-science-in...ity-and-health
Hail the BISON!!!
Oh you know how I found out about GNC supplements? From a couple of guys that lived on the second floor of Reed hall. They didn't play any sports just wanted to get jacked for the chicks brah. Used to eat creatine by the spoon full too because some NAIA wrestlers showed me that one. Blew out my knee and haven't touched any crap like that ever again. It puts the weight on fine joints just couldn't handle it.
Lardsin must go!
Creatine was a huge fad in the Summer of '97 for college wrestlers. Then three wrestlers died early in the season not realizing that taking a supplement that made your body retain water was wise for cutting weight. After that, we got new weight classes and stricter weigh-ins.
The first creatine product I got was pretty concentrated compared to the fillers you paid for at GNC. I didn't like the concentrated stuff as it made the Gatorade too grainy and the GNC product was pointless with all the fillers and too expensive. After that, I just stuck to eating steak or peanut butter sandwiches. My paternal genetics finally kicked in around that time and went from a 167 LBS to a Heavyweight over the Summer. However, I'm still angry I didn't get the height.
Hail the BISON!!!
Brock is quite the adult. Probably the most adult like in this whole situation. Nothing will come from this. You're not interested in the facts because they may cloud your cool aide. Some day find a few players from this year's team and ask them their opinion on this. They'll give you the truth and maybe then you'll except it. Until then, fuck you. A mistake was made, probably an honest one, but nobody will admit it. That's a shock, I know, the entire universe is lacking in accountability, except for a few Bison that I know and thank God for that because they allowed us Bisonviller's to celebrate another amazing run.
If we concentrated on the really important stuff in life, there'd be a shortage of fishing poles"
When you play football, you gotta like the taste of blood, And 50 percent of the time, it's your blood.
It is characteristic of the unlearned that they are forever proposing something which is old, and because it has recently come to their own attention, supposing it to be new.
"The best way to get the right answer on the internet is not to ask a question; it's to post the wrong answer."
Haven't really seen too many facts.
That's the problem.
Lardsin must go!
So, given you don't know what's really going on, you chime in, siding on the NCAA testing...
I don’t get the animosity toward the NCAA on this. Athletes and by extension, programs are responsible for knowing what they put in their body.
The notion that calling something a ‘pre-workout powder’ makes whatever is in it automatically benign is ridiculous. It’s either complete ignorance or complete obsfuscation. Neither obsolve responsibility.
At this point, seems like there’s a disagreement about the source of the substance. Could truely be from outside the program, could be plausible deniability.
Last edited by Green1; 01-31-2019 at 03:06 AM. Reason: don't know what's going on with Bisonville. trying to reply to this post
Creatine simply restores fuel in the muscles. It doesn't do anything anabolic by itself.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯