steroids News Archive

29-Nov-2006

 

  • Olympians warned over sweet and sour steroids (ABC via Yahoo!7 News)
    A senior Chinese official has warned that athletes competing at the Beijing Olympics could test positive for drugs after eating in local restaurants.


  • Steroids and golfers: Unlikely, but unclear (The Florida Times-Union)
    Vijay Singh was on the practice range of the Disney World Resorts Palm Course on a sweltering central Florida afternoon, sweating for hours to fine-tune the swing that got him into the World Golf Hall of Fame.


  • McGwire belongs in Hall of Shame (NorthJersey.com)
    Those who've been doing the morality-wrestle with steroids finally have reached Judgment Day. The 2007 Hall of Fame ballot is out, and with it, the litmus test for the ages: Does Mark McGwire, the first chemically-enhanced home run hitter to reach Cooperstown's doorstep, belong?


  • Independent firm may screen HASD students for steroids, drugs (Standard Speaker)
    Hazleton Area School District officials are considering hiring an independent firm to oversee a random drug, alcohol and steroid screening program that had been suggested earlier this year by some school directors.


  • McGwire on Baseball Hall Ballot, 1st With Steroid Tie (Update1) (Bloomberg.com)
    Nov. 27 (Bloomberg) -- Mark McGwire, Jose Canseco and Ken Caminiti are among 17 former Major League Baseball players on the 2007 National Baseball Hall of Fame ballot, the first involving leading players linked to steroids. Also listed are Cal Ripken Jr. and Tony Gwynn.


  • Year-over-year comparisons skewed by Wilma's impact (The Palm Beach Post)
    Existing single-family home sales in Palm Beach County and the Treasure Coast were hardly on steroids last month but they still earned an asterisk.


  • Steroids pump up interest in Hall vote (Philly.com)
    Universal rejection vs. unanimous choice. Both intriguing possibilities were conjured up yesterday when, as expected, Mark McGwire, Cal Ripken Jr. and Tony Gwynn made their inaugural appearances on baseball's annual Hall of Fame ballot.


  • Asthma drugs cause immune cell build-up (Reuters via Yahoo! News)
    The use of beta-agonist inhalers, which include drugs such as Proventil (albuterol), for asthma appears to promote the accumulation of immune cells called type 2 T cells, according to a report in the Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology. The results reinforce the importance of including anti-inflammatory steroids, note the authors.


  • McGwire, steroids: issues in Baseball Hall of Fame debate (AFP via Yahoo! News)
    Mark McGwire, whose slugging feats have been clouded by doping suspicions, joined admitted steroid users Jose Canseco and the late Ken Caminiti on the US Baseball Hall of Fame ballot released.


  • What they're saying about McGwire (Kansas City Star)
    ?I turned in my Baseball Writers? card this year, specifically so I wouldn?t have to vote on cheaters after possibly already having voted in cheaters without knowing so, because there was no steroids testing at the time.?


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