Oh, I see. I didn't realize players no longer take 'roids hgh ped's to jack up their numbers. That explains why his numbers didn't spike like sosa bonds, mcgwire. These days I suppose they take ped's just to be cool, eh?
https://www.i-care.net/hgh-benefits.html
i love the brewers too double, but im not a moron. i keep an open mind and read a lot. something most people don't do. "steroids get you bigger, faster, stronger" is such a 1990's attitude. why the fuck would pitchers take them? bulking up makes you throw faster?
https://www.i-care.net/hgh-benefits.html
i love the brewers too double, but im not a moron. i keep an open mind and read a lot. something most people don't do. "steroids get you bigger, faster, stronger" is such a 1990's attitude. why the fuck would pitchers take them? bulking up makes you throw faster?
apparently we are not having the same conversation. i don't know whether braun is guilty or innocent. i lean innocent, but need more information, which i think will come months or even years later. nobody knows for sure right now. not even you ass clown.
i was talking about your dumbass comments regarding the purpose of taking PED's. but thank you. please come again.
apparently we are not having the same conversation. i don't know whether braun is guilty or innocent. i lean innocent, but need more information, which i think will come months or even years later. nobody knows for sure right now. not even you ass clown.
i was talking about your dumbass comments regarding the purpose of taking PED's. but thank you. please come again.
Here is Laurenzi's statement:
On February 24th, Ryan Braun stated during his press conference
that "there were a lot of things that we learned about the collector,
about the collection process, about the way that the entire thing worked
that made us very concerned and very suspicious about what could have
actually happened." Shortly thereafter, someone who had intimate
knowledge of the facts of this case released my name to the media. I am
issuing this statement to set the record straight.
I am a 1983 graduate of the University of Wisconsin and have received
Master Degrees from the University of North Carolina and Loyola
University of Chicago. My full-time job is the director of
rehabilitation services at a health care facility. In the past, I have
worked as a teacher and an athletic trainer, including performing
volunteer work with Olympic athletes. I am a member of both the National
Athletic Trainers' Association and the Wisconsin Athletic Trainers'
Association.
I have been a drug collector for Comprehensive Drug Testing since 2005
and have been performing collections for Major League Baseball's Joint
Drug Prevention and Treatment Program since that time. I have performed
over 600 collections for MLB and also have performed collections for
other professional sports leagues. I have performed post-season
collections for MLB in four separate seasons involving five different
clubs.
On October 1, 2011, I collected samples from Mr. Braun and two other
players. The CDT collection team for that day, in addition to me,
included three chaperones and a CDT coordinator. One of the chaperones
was my son, Anthony. Chaperones do not have any role in the actual
collection process, but rather escort the player to the collection area.
I followed the same procedure in collecting Mr. Braun’s sample as I did
in the hundreds of other samples I collected under the Program. I
sealed the bottles containing Mr. Braun’s A and B samples with
specially-numbered, tamper-resistant seals, and Mr. Braun signed a form
certifying, among other things, that the specimens were capped and
sealed in his presence and that the specimen identification numbers on
the top of the form matched those on the seals. I placed the two bottles
containing Mr. Braun’s samples in a plastic bag and sealed the bag. I
then placed the sealed bag in a standard cardboard Specimen Box which I
also sealed with a tamper-resistant, correspondingly-numbered seal
placed over the box opening. I then placed Mr. Braun’s Specimen Box, and
the Specimen Boxes containing the samples of the two other players, in a
Federal Express Clinic Pack. None of the sealed Specimen Boxes
identified the players. I completed my collections at Miller Park at
approximately 5:00 p.m. Given the lateness of the hour that I completed
my collections, there was no FedEx office located within 50 miles of
Miller Park that would ship packages that day or Sunday. Therefore, the
earliest that the specimens could be shipped was Monday, October 3. In
that circumstance, CDT has instructed collectors since I began in 2005
that they should safeguard the samples in their homes until FedEx is
able to immediately ship the sample to the laboratory, rather than
having the samples sit for one day or more at a local FedEx office. The
protocol has been in place since 2005 when I started with CDT and there
have been other occasions when I have had to store samples in my home
for at least one day, all without incident. The FedEx Clinic Pack
containing Mr. Braun’s samples never left my custody. Consistent with
CDT’s instructions, I brought the FedEx Clinic Pack containing the
samples to my home. Immediately upon arriving home, I placed the FedEx
Clinic Pack in a Rubbermaid container in my office which is located in
my basement. My basement office is sufficiently cool to store urine
samples. No one other than my wife was in my home during the period in
which the samples were stored. The sealed Specimen Boxes were not
removed from the FedEx Clinic Pack during the entire period in which
they were in my home. On Monday, October 3, I delivered the FedEx Clinic
Pack containing Mr. Braun’s Specimen Box to a FedEx office for delivery
to the laboratory on Tuesday, October 4. At no point did I tamper in
any way with the samples. It is my understanding that the samples were
received at the laboratory with all tamper-resistant seals intact.
This situation has caused great emotional distress for me and my
family. I have worked hard my entire life, have performed my job duties
with integrity and professionalism, and have done so with respect to
this matter and all other collections in which I have participated.
Neither I nor members of my family will make any further public comments
on this matter. I request that members of the media, and baseball fans,
whatever their views on thismatter, respect our privacy. And I would
like to sincerely thank my family and friends for their overwhelming
support through this difficult time. Any future inquiries should be
directed to my attorney Boyd Johnson of Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and
Dorr LLP.
Here is Laurenzi's statement:
On February 24th, Ryan Braun stated during his press conference
that "there were a lot of things that we learned about the collector,
about the collection process, about the way that the entire thing worked
that made us very concerned and very suspicious about what could have
actually happened." Shortly thereafter, someone who had intimate
knowledge of the facts of this case released my name to the media. I am
issuing this statement to set the record straight.
I am a 1983 graduate of the University of Wisconsin and have received
Master Degrees from the University of North Carolina and Loyola
University of Chicago. My full-time job is the director of
rehabilitation services at a health care facility. In the past, I have
worked as a teacher and an athletic trainer, including performing
volunteer work with Olympic athletes. I am a member of both the National
Athletic Trainers' Association and the Wisconsin Athletic Trainers'
Association.
I have been a drug collector for Comprehensive Drug Testing since 2005
and have been performing collections for Major League Baseball's Joint
Drug Prevention and Treatment Program since that time. I have performed
over 600 collections for MLB and also have performed collections for
other professional sports leagues. I have performed post-season
collections for MLB in four separate seasons involving five different
clubs.
On October 1, 2011, I collected samples from Mr. Braun and two other
players. The CDT collection team for that day, in addition to me,
included three chaperones and a CDT coordinator. One of the chaperones
was my son, Anthony. Chaperones do not have any role in the actual
collection process, but rather escort the player to the collection area.
I followed the same procedure in collecting Mr. Braun’s sample as I did
in the hundreds of other samples I collected under the Program. I
sealed the bottles containing Mr. Braun’s A and B samples with
specially-numbered, tamper-resistant seals, and Mr. Braun signed a form
certifying, among other things, that the specimens were capped and
sealed in his presence and that the specimen identification numbers on
the top of the form matched those on the seals. I placed the two bottles
containing Mr. Braun’s samples in a plastic bag and sealed the bag. I
then placed the sealed bag in a standard cardboard Specimen Box which I
also sealed with a tamper-resistant, correspondingly-numbered seal
placed over the box opening. I then placed Mr. Braun’s Specimen Box, and
the Specimen Boxes containing the samples of the two other players, in a
Federal Express Clinic Pack. None of the sealed Specimen Boxes
identified the players. I completed my collections at Miller Park at
approximately 5:00 p.m. Given the lateness of the hour that I completed
my collections, there was no FedEx office located within 50 miles of
Miller Park that would ship packages that day or Sunday. Therefore, the
earliest that the specimens could be shipped was Monday, October 3. In
that circumstance, CDT has instructed collectors since I began in 2005
that they should safeguard the samples in their homes until FedEx is
able to immediately ship the sample to the laboratory, rather than
having the samples sit for one day or more at a local FedEx office. The
protocol has been in place since 2005 when I started with CDT and there
have been other occasions when I have had to store samples in my home
for at least one day, all without incident. The FedEx Clinic Pack
containing Mr. Braun’s samples never left my custody. Consistent with
CDT’s instructions, I brought the FedEx Clinic Pack containing the
samples to my home. Immediately upon arriving home, I placed the FedEx
Clinic Pack in a Rubbermaid container in my office which is located in
my basement. My basement office is sufficiently cool to store urine
samples. No one other than my wife was in my home during the period in
which the samples were stored. The sealed Specimen Boxes were not
removed from the FedEx Clinic Pack during the entire period in which
they were in my home. On Monday, October 3, I delivered the FedEx Clinic
Pack containing Mr. Braun’s Specimen Box to a FedEx office for delivery
to the laboratory on Tuesday, October 4. At no point did I tamper in
any way with the samples. It is my understanding that the samples were
received at the laboratory with all tamper-resistant seals intact.
This situation has caused great emotional distress for me and my
family. I have worked hard my entire life, have performed my job duties
with integrity and professionalism, and have done so with respect to
this matter and all other collections in which I have participated.
Neither I nor members of my family will make any further public comments
on this matter. I request that members of the media, and baseball fans,
whatever their views on thismatter, respect our privacy. And I would
like to sincerely thank my family and friends for their overwhelming
support through this difficult time. Any future inquiries should be
directed to my attorney Boyd Johnson of Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and
Dorr LLP.
what most people fail to realize, is that it's not even about the "level of testosterone." its about the T/E ratio. the easiest way to change this is not the numerator. its the denominator.
and the worst part of this whole thing is that this whole story is even out there in the 1st place. this was leaked to the 4-letter, and if it wasn't, as is MLB policy, nobody would even know this shit happened. guilty until proven innocent doesn't apply here, and whoever released this info to the 4-letter knew that
what most people fail to realize, is that it's not even about the "level of testosterone." its about the T/E ratio. the easiest way to change this is not the numerator. its the denominator.
and the worst part of this whole thing is that this whole story is even out there in the 1st place. this was leaked to the 4-letter, and if it wasn't, as is MLB policy, nobody would even know this shit happened. guilty until proven innocent doesn't apply here, and whoever released this info to the 4-letter knew that
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