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Old 11-17-2003, 10:14 AM   #17
grbh
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Default RE:Huge doping scandal in US sport.

Four Raiders might be suspended for THG.

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Game-day notebook: Four Raiders might face THG suspension
Nov. 16, 2003
By Jay Glazer
SportsLine.com Senior Writer
Tell Jay your opinion!


For the first time in sports history, professional athletes are facing suspension for testing positive for the controversial designer steroid tetrahydrogestrinone, or THG.

The NFL Today and SportsLine.com have learned four Oakland Raiders starters have tested positive for the steroid. The players this week were informed via letter of their positive THG tests, and pending an appeal, each faces a four-game suspension by the NFL.


Bill Romanowski is among four Raiders to test positive for THG and now might face suspension.(Getty Images)
The players are former Pro Bowl defensive tackle Dana Stubblefield, former All-Pro center Barrett Robbins, former Pro Bowl linebacker Bill Romanowski and defensive tackle Chris Cooper.

According to the league's drug policy, suspensions are not immediate and would not take effect until after a protracted appeal process that could include testing of another sample, as well as a hearing. In addition, the union will fight the suspensions.

Three weeks ago, The NFL Today and SportsLine.com reported, in addition to these four players, others such as Raiders RBs Tyrone Wheatley and Chris Heatherington, former Raider Josh Taves, Chiefs wide receiver Johnnie Morton, Falcons linebacker Artie Ulmer and Patriots special teams Pro Bowl LB Larry Izzo had been subpoenaed to testify in the government's IRS probe of Victor Conte and his Bay Area Laboratory Co-Operative (BALCO).

Part of that report included breaking news that previous urine samples from many of those players had been tested by the league for THG -- the centerpiece of one of the biggest steroid scandals in sports history.

Sunday's news also marks the first time in history four players from the same team were facing suspension at the same time because of failed drug tests.

The NFL is allowed to test for such drugs without the previous permission of the NFL Players Association. But according to several people close to this situation, the suspensions of the four Raiders might cause a very tense situation between the league and the union. The union believes the league should not suspend players for any positive samples found in retests. The league, however, has a strict zero-tolerance policy on anabolic steroids.

Since an early September raid on Conte's BALCO lab, several sports organizations have begun testing for THG. The NFL, however, would become the first major professional sports institution to actually levy a suspension for testing positive for it.

Oakland senior assistant Bruce Allen told the Associated Press before Sunday's game against Minnesota that he knew of no suspensions. He criticized the report but wouldn't confirm or deny the positive tests.

"The league's program on testing and information on testing are extremely confidential," Allen said. "So any reports out of that, someone's either violating the law or making them up. I hope they're able to find the people who spread false rumors."

"That's a situation that's out there," Robbins told the AP after the Raiders' 28-18 victory. "I haven't been notified about it. I don't think it's right the way it's being handled. That's about all I've got to say about that."

Said teammate Trace Armstrong, the players association president: "The process has been violated by the information coming out."

The furor over THG is spreading to several sports and nations.

Major League Baseball this week admitted five to seven percent of its overall steroid tests have returned positive and will now begin to implement banned-steroid testing. Boxing champion Sugar Shane Mosley has also been subpoenaed by the government, which reportedly asked for Mosley's urine sample.

Olympic officials said they will test for THG next summer in Athens, while authorities in horse racing, skiing and rugby are also implementing such tests.

The International Olympic Committee said it would add tetrahydrogestrinone to the list of banned substances included in its tests at the Aug. 13-29 games. THG already has turned up in the samples of several track and field athletes. The International Ski Federation said it will test for THG this season. THG testing was also set to begin at the Rugby World Cup in Australia.

Also in Australia, the horse racing industry has added THG to its testing of thoroughbreds' urine. International track and field officials plan to retest previously taken urine samples from the world championships in August, and swimming's world governing body will consider retesting samples from its world championships this summer.

The designer steroid flap burst open when Conte was accused by an anonymous track coach of supplying athletes with THG. Conte has

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