Hockey goalie caught with Propecia (banned substance)

D

DanHLT

Guest
NHL goalie Jose Theodore of the Montreal Canadiens was caught using a banned substance (Propecia!!). Apparently it is used to mask the effect of certain steroids used by weightlifters, but Theodore has claimed he has been using it for the last 8-9 years for hair loss. :freaked:

The big deal is that he may be banned for 2 years from participating in international competitions like the World Championships and Olympics.

But the bigger deal is.. Jose Theodore with hair loss?? We all thought he has amazing hair!
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/hockey ... yers/1420/

Time to go out and buy some Propecia 8)
 

wangho75

Experienced Member
Reaction score
4
he has amazing hair because he's been taking it for 8 or 9 years
 
D

DanHLT

Guest
DonaldAnderson said:
He is a good goalie too. Mask the steroids huh?


Finasteride is only used to mask a steroid used by weightlifters .. i think it is called Nandrolone. This wouldn't affect his reflexes as a goalie.

His team doctor has been prescribing him propecia for the past several years. His family has a history of male pattern baldness.. his dad is also bald i think.
 

Britannia

Senior Member
Reaction score
3
Finatsteride does indeed mask steriod use i.e. it prevents the illegal substance being discovered on drugs test. Over on the offtopic forum we are discussing a tennis player who has just been banned for a year because he took Propecia!
Of course it looks like hes got great hair. He has been taking Propecia for 9 years. What did you expect?
 

YoungAndThin

Established Member
Reaction score
6
There was a story about this in the sports pages today. It said that a source close to Theodore's family said that male pattern baldness is very prominent in Theodore's family and that you would only have to look at pictures of his father and brothers to see that. It also said that Theodore's father and brother all wear hair pieces.

Read this article and look at his picture! No male pattern baldness. But it said he was taking the drug as a preventative measure because he didn't want to lose his hair like his dad and brothers.

http://sports.espn.go.com/nhl/news/story?id=2325068
 

Johnny24601

Experienced Member
Reaction score
2
re:

My dreams of being one of the middle two guys on the 4 man bob sled are over..............male pattern baldness is ruining my life!
 

EasyEd

Established Member
Reaction score
2
Really wish I could see what this guy would look like if he hadn't been on finasteride for the past decade...
 

thiningattop

Established Member
Reaction score
0
If he's been taking it for 9 years, how come he never tested positive all those times before when he was named to the preliminary 81-player eligibility list??

Hes not a big guy, so i doubt hes taking any crazy steriods, but ... this just seems strange to me.
 

Britannia

Senior Member
Reaction score
3
Re: re:

Johnny24601 said:
finasteride was not banned until recently.

Summer 2005
 

YoungAndThin

Established Member
Reaction score
6
It's interesting how he was taking propecia strictly as a precautionary measure. I really don't think he has a hint of male pattern baldness.

I mean in theory would that work? If a person has severe male pattern baldness on both sides of his family would taking Propecia before male pattern baldness even starts enable the person to kind of hold off or delay male pattern baldness indefinately?

What effect does Propecia have on those who don't even have male pattern baldness?
 

Doom

Member
Reaction score
0
Another example of how today's media absolutely sucks is that they can't even do their research about Propecia. I've seen numerous news articles stating that it was a " hair growth stimulant". I would hardly classify Propecia as a stimulant. Today's media is a disgrace. They just can't report anything right. Unless it's propaganda.








:2gunsfiring_v1:
 

ShedMaster

Senior Member
Reaction score
5
An olympic athlete banned for taking propecia as well... read...

http://www.oregonlive.com/sports/oregon ... xml&coll=7


Better bald than banned, you numskull
Sunday, February 12, 2006

R ecently, an angry reader wrote to ask, "Hey baldie, how often are you the target of a hair joke?"

Hold up.

I'm bald?

Well, I suppose that means I should weigh in on Zach Lund, the top U.S. skeleton racer who was banned Friday from the Olympics in Turin, Italy. Lund was booted for taking a common hair-restoration pill with an ingredient that can be used to mask steroids.

And while there will be a lot of hand wringing, and hair splitting, when it comes to the case of bald men and Olympic bans, the World Anti-Doping Agency got it right.

Now, Lund didn't get everything he deserved last week. Because if life were fair, in addition to his suspension, Lund would have awakened with a thick, silky mane.

"I would like to keep my hair," Lund said in a conference call with reporters. "I'm 26 years old, and I'm already going bald."

High-performance athletes receive specialized training. They get world-class facilities, the top advisers and the best nutrition. They're also tested for performance-enhancing drugs and masking agents. And so the lesson in Lund's case is that woeful ignorance trumps all the help you can find.

The Court of Arbitration for Sport said it thinks Lund did not cheat, but ruled he should serve a one-year suspension. And in a statement, Jim Scherr, head of the U.S. Olympic Committee, said, "We do not believe that Zach Lund is a doper."

But he's very much a dope.

he list of banned substances was updated at the beginning of 2005, but Lund didn't bother to check it. Nor did he call the toll-free, 24-hour telephone number that the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency set up to answer questions about drugs. At a time when Olympians are being asked to scrutinize everything they put in their bodies, Lund sabotaged himself by ingesting the drug finasteride (sold under the brand names Propecia and Proscar).

Canadian goalie Jose Theodore and bobsledder Sebastien Gattuso from Monaco also were ruled to have ingested finasteride. And Argentine tennis player Mariano Hood and German soccer player Nemanja Vucicevic were banned for taking the same drug last year. So Propecia is the new poppyseed muffin.

Without strict drug-testing guidelines, the Olympics would be an International Steroid Convention. There can be no exceptions. And while Lund ends up as a causality, his plight also comes attached to a straight-forward message if you're not distracted by all the hair talk.

The Olympics are serious about drugs.

I f Lund badly wants hair, that's his business. But also, when he gets tangled in his pursuit of it, it becomes his problem. Lund needed to be clean for Turin, and he wasn't.

I was in Sydney at the 2000 Olympics when 16-year old Romanian gymnast Andreea Raducan was stripped of her gold medal for taking over-the-counter cold medicine. During that ordeal, I kept seeing Raducan, a few years removed, panhandling on the streets of Romania, lamenting the loss of her Olympic gold medal while saying, "It was just cold medicine."

So what happened to little Raducan?

First, a jeweler presented her a replica of the gold medal, then a foreign production company made a movie about her life, and she also received a $30,000 bonus for her Olympic performance. Then, she continued competing, finishing third at the 2001 world championships before retiring in 2004 to coach.

As devastating as being stripped of that medal might have appeared, Raducan pulled through. And Lund will survive, go on to compete in 2010 in Vancouver, B.C., and maybe even coach young U.S. skeleton competitors someday.

In fact, he's teaching already.
 

ShedMaster

Senior Member
Reaction score
5
Doom said:
Another example of how today's media absolutely sucks is that they can't even do their research about Propecia. I've seen numerous news articles stating that it was a " hair growth stimulant". I would hardly classify Propecia as a stimulant. Today's media is a disgrace. They just can't report anything right. Unless it's propaganda.


I think they may have needed to phrase the article so that the average person could understand what they were saying without getting too technical. That was not the point of the article. the idea was the drug was for hair loss and thats all that was important to understand why he was taking it.
 

Z

Established Member
Reaction score
0
Re: re:

Johnny24601 said:
My dreams of being one of the middle two guys on the 4 man bob sled are over..............male pattern baldness is ruining my life!

That just asking for a homosexual innuendo based joke, isn't it?
 

Aplunk1

Senior Member
Reaction score
9
Haha, I was actually taking that quote seriously until I realized how funny you made it, Z. :)
 
Top