goodNumber10
International
Tell me again how PED's mean you don't have to work hard.![]()
i guess it could be seen you don't have to manage your recovery as well...
Tell me again how PED's mean you don't have to work hard.![]()
i guess it could be seen you don't have to manage your recovery as well...
I have no problem with medical exceptions. Hell, the IRB could employ a few doctors, whose acceptance is required to take banned substances. Seems a lot easier than openly accepting doping.+1^
People that are against doping...
Let me ask you this: Would you be upset if Jean De Villiers used illegal substances to halve the recovery time of his current injury, or if they ensured that he could return to the sport without hindrance?
Or if it meant that Alex Corbisiero could continue to play the sport without continual enforced absences?
But for that specific reason this is a grey area.
Every person at the gym nowadays use some sort of supplement (legal or illegal) to assist in recovery/fat burning/ muscle toning.
Most people don't want to manage the recovery time, and want results, so they use all sorts of shakes/powders/pills to aid them. How is that any different from doping??
The problem with doping is that if you allow it, then players who wouldn't want to do it would be pressured into doing it. From a player welfare POV, it should be banned.
The problem with doping is that if you allow it, then players who wouldn't want to do it would be pressured into doing it. From a player welfare POV, it should be banned.
The logic goes like this:
Doping is used to get a competitive advantage.
Without that competitive advantage, you lose out comparative to those that do take it.
This puts pressure on you, internally (desire to play better) and externally (pressure from coaches and fans about your perceived weaknesses) to dope.
Legalise it, and players would dope by default, with maybe a few renegades here and there that choose not to and get by on ability alone.
Also, think about the wider repercussions. Governing bodies and elite teams will be able to safely dope with considerations to the health of the player. Young and amateur players will not. We could set separate regulations for the professional and amateur game, but the example set by the professional game will lend the amateur game a culture of acceptability over doping. The main reason that amateurs don't dope is because most have a negative view towards doping. Legalise it in the professional game, and it will become more acceptable in the amateur game. Unless you plan on thoroughly policing doping in the amateur game (ha, not happening), then what weapon do you have left to stop doping in the amateur game? The IRB has just as much, if not more, responsibility towards the amateurs as they do the professionals.
I have no problem with medical exceptions. Hell, the IRB could employ a few doctors, whose acceptance is required to take banned substances. Seems a lot easier than openly accepting doping.
This was in an aspect of rugby which we as a sport constantly claim doesn't matter ("All shapes and sizes") which anyone with any intelligence can tell is pure bull****.
But for that specific reason this is a grey area.
Every person at the gym nowadays use some sort of supplement (legal or illegal) to assist in recovery/fat burning/ muscle toning.
Most people don't want to manage the recovery time, and want results, so they use all sorts of shakes/powders/pills to aid them. How is that any different from doping??
agreed, but they are bought legally and adhere to "strict" guidlines.
It's legal to buy use anabolic steroids in the UK, it's their use in WADA affiliated sports that is illegal -
a lot of supplements bought from smaller companies do not adhere to any guidelines at all... hence why you get "contaminated" supplements.
Oh, come on. I think doping creates a more unfair advantage than a chocolate flavour protein shake. Let's be real.
agreed, but they are bought legally and adhere to "strict" guidlines.
Not saying it is.
I'm not really going to offer an opinion on this, just interested on peoples thoughts.
That was never my point, in modern rugby the faster, stronger and more coordinated player can get absolutely nowhere if they can't gain the required mass and it happens, some people can't get big enough naturally to play rugby nowadays when they could have been the best thirty years ago.That's not what that bloody adage means though... better athletes have always been better in any sport where athleticism is important.
A guy who is 5'8" has an advantage over a guy who is 6' and wants to play SH - the same for the fat bloke that wants to be a prop or the 6'10" guy who wants to be a lock.
The adage is just as true today as it ever was - the only difference is that today's pro players aren't borderline alcoholics or, you know... literally ****ing amateurs.
There wasn't some magical time when the slow, weak and poorly coordinated guy was better at rugby than he would be today.
Pedantic, you know what i meant.
That was never my point, in modern rugby the faster, stronger and more coordinated player can get absolutely nowhere if they can't gain the required mass and it happens, some people can't get big enough naturally to play rugby nowadays when they could have been the best thirty years ago.
He wouldn't be able to step like that at +10kgs. Just saying there is still a spot in pro rugby for the smaller folk if they contribute something different.
I didn't say there wasn't! But if we take a player like Owen Farrell, he's 96kg (wikipedia) and he certainly needs it. Not every 6ft 2 person in the world could achieve his mass and if he was one of those and could only reach 85-90kg he wouldn't be a pro rugby player despite having the skills. I love seeing smaller guys do well, having been told I've been too small for teams (usually a cop out from a coach with no balls considering I'm a 9 or 10) it's my favorite thing in rugby to see a player <80kg doing well.