New previosuly undetected steroid

H

Harvey Balboner

Guest
Anybody ever heard of this stuff? tetrahydrogestrinone, btw the guy that was selling it was also Barry Bonds nutritional advisor. The NFL is also about to start test for it.

U.S. Anti-Doping Agency says it found steroid 'conspiracy'

By ROB GLOSTER, AP Sports Writer
October 17, 2003
An anonymous tipster. A used syringe filled with a mysterious substance that arrives by overnight courier at a drug lab. Enough secrets to fill a good spy novel.

The latest scandal to hit track and field involves a designer steroid and could lead to the disqualification of several U.S. athletes from the 2004 Athens Olympics.

The U.S. Anti-Doping Agency said Thursday that several track athletes tested positive in late June for the steroid known as tetrahydrogestrinone, or THG, that until recently was undetectable.

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Those athletes now face two-year suspensions.

USADA chief executive officer Terry Madden called it a widespread ``conspiracy'' involving chemists, coaches and athletes that was brought to the agency's attention by an anonymous tip.

``I know of no other drug bust that is larger than this involving the number of athletes involved,'' said Madden, who refused to reveal the names or genders of the athletes, or to be more specific about how many had tested positive.

Madden said the inquiry began in early June and expanded to other U.S. professional sports, but wouldn't give specifics. He said he believes international athletes also have used the steroid, which is taken by putting a couple of drops from a syringe under the tongue.

``What we have uncovered appears to be intentional doping of the worst sort,'' Madden said in a statement before a conference call from USADA headquarters in Colorado Springs, Colo. ``This is a far cry from athletes accidentally testing positive as a result of taking contaminated nutritional supplements.''

Olympic athletes face drug tests at major competitions, as well as random testing between events. Their samples are divided in two and stored for future reference.

The athletes whose ``A'' samples revealed THG have been notified and will now have their ``B'' samples tested. If those also are positive, a review process will begin. Appeals could last for months.

THG has a chemical structure similar to two banned anabolic steroids, Madden said, but was tweaked to avoid detection. Though THG is not specifically named as a banned substance in world track, it would be considered a related substance outlawed under the sport's doping rules.

``This is a serious warning for cheaters,'' said Dick Pound, chairman of the World Anti-Doping Agency. ``It shows that supposedly undetectable substances can be detected as new tests are developed.''

Madden said the USADA received a call from a man in June claiming to be a track coach. The caller named athletes he claimed were using a steroid that wouldn't be detected by tests then being used by the USADA. The man later sent the agency a syringe containing the substance, Madden said.

After determining the syringe contained THG, the USADA retested 350 urine samples taken from athletes at the U.S. track and field championships in June at Stanford, as well as 100 samples from random out-of-competition tests on track athletes and 100 random samples from non-track athletes.

Madden said the USADA, acting with extreme secrecy while it conducted the tests, contacted federal authorities with the findings.

The anonymous tipster, Madden said, identified the source of the THG as Victor Conte, founder of BALCO laboratory of Burlingame, Calif. The lab supplies nutritional guidance and supplements to athletes ranging from Barry Bonds to Bill Romanowski to Marion Jones.

``Everything that the coach has identified to us up to this time is true. We are fairly certain this substance came from Victor Conte and BALCO labs,'' said Madden, refusing to be specific.

But Conte, in an e-mail Thursday to The Associated Press and other news organizations, said BALCO was not the source of the substance.

``In my opinion, this is about jealous competitive coaches and athletes that all have a history of promoting and using performance enhancing agents being 'completely hypocritical' in their actions,'' Conte said.

Agents from the Internal Revenue Service and a San Mateo County narcotics task force went to BALCO last month. No arrests were made, and IRS spokesman Mark Lessler wouldn't comment on the unannounced visit.

As part of the retesting of the samples from the U.S. track championships, Madden said, officials discovered several positive tests for the stimulant modafinil -- which sprinter Kelli White says she took for the sleep disorder narcolepsy.

White tested positive this summer at the world championships in France for modafinil, and it could cost her a pair of sprint gold medals. Her case is being reviewed by the USADA.
 
In the wake of the budding track and field steroid scandal, the National Football League announced Friday that it will begin testing for tetrahydrogestrinone (THG), the New York Times reported in Saturday's editions.

NFL spokesman Greg Aiello told the paper that the league expects to add the substance to its banned list by the end of the season, if not sooner. The league has the power to test for THG under the collective bargaining agreement, according to Aiello.

The first rumblings of a THG presence in the NFL may have come this past August. According to the report, two NFL team officials said recently several players from different teams were approached during training camp by people peddling an undetectable performance-enhancing drug that, they said, worked like a steroid without the negative side effects. Those officials then described a drug practically identical to what anti-doping officials are now calling THG, according to the Times.

Other professional leagues may soon join the NFL in testing for the drug. A spokesman for the National Basketball Association told the Times that the league, which randomly tests for steroids, might add THG to its list of banned substances in the near future but has not yet discussed it with the players' union.

Major League Baseball said it might add THG to its testing plan if the league begins mandatory steroid testing. MLB is still awaiting the results of this year's random test run. The National Hockey League did not return calls, according to the report.

THG has become big news in recent weeks in the wake of a burgeoning scandal that now includes over 40 track and field athletes facing subpoenas. Dr. Don Catlin, who runs the Olympic drug-testing lab at UCLA, created the test that caught several track stars and created the furor. The NFL also uses Catlin's lab to test its players, according to the Times.
 
there is always undectable juice out there even legal ones.. My secret in a steroid like substance but with research you can figure it out.
I am in that area and have heard of the news its stupid I think the whole whole world is chemically enhanced, next you will have to test office executives for caffiene..LOL
 
That piece of s@#T caoch took a used syringe out of the trash and turned it in. Now everyone is going to add this to their drug tests. that guys a scumbag he gains nothing from ratting!:angry:
 
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