Chelsea were fined £40,000 last month for breaching the doping regulations by conducting their own tests.
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more chelsea corruption
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I think the problem is that if a chelsea player shows drugs in his system at a chelsea drug test - then chelsea can take private steps to ensure that it is not known to the public. Which is against regulations, as all drug takers should be known to the governing body...James Philip Milner Fanclub #1
Curtis Julian Jones Fanclub #1
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5aq1b
They're all a bunch of cnuts anyway!Originally posted by CacodemonI think the problem is that if a chelsea player shows drugs in his system at a chelsea drug test - then chelsea can take private steps to ensure that it is not known to the public. Which is against regulations, as all drug takers should be known to the governing body...
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A compelling argument I think we'd all agree.Originally posted by 5aq1bThey're all a bunch of cnuts anyway!.
Suppose you have a physicist and a sociologist standing at the side of a field, observing a set of events unfolding on the field. The physicist does [describes] it using the terminology of mass and velocity and frequency of radiation and the rest. And the sociologist does it by describing it as a rugby match.
May the Lord bless this post.
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This is about performance enhancing drugs too. I bet footie is full of them....Originally posted by CacodemonI think the problem is that if a chelsea player shows drugs in his system at a chelsea drug test - then chelsea can take private steps to ensure that it is not known to the public. Which is against regulations, as all drug takers should be known to the governing body...
remember was it juventus or one of the milan teams that got done for this a few years back.
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How come?Originally posted by Tomno disrespect - but that comes over a bit naive.
What I meant was that there was romours that the FA (or whoever performs the tests) found out about the Chelski test during the Mutu case. The word was the they wanted Mutu of the books, knew he did drugs and "volunteered" (sp?) him for a test.
It could be illegal to force tests on emplyees on the UK, I just know they are common in the US.Blank
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It's a sport, sporting regulations follow not normal employee law - hennce the fine.
This isn't about recreational drugs anyhow, it's about performance enhancing drugs and in particular a practice whereby chelsea have been "changing the blood" of their players to increase stamina. The inference is that the club are doping the players.
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Ahhh, I remember the case now.Originally posted by TomIt's a sport, sporting regulations follow not normal employee law - hennce the fine.
This isn't about recreational drugs anyhow, it's about performance enhancing drugs and in particular a practice whereby chelsea have been "changing the blood" of their players to increase stamina. The inference is that the club are doping the players.
They used fresh blood so injuries would heal faster. It was kind of a borderline case. That`s probably why the punishment wasn`t harder.Blank
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