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Usain Bolt under attack - Who is Angel Heredia? LOL

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  • Usain Bolt under attack - Who is Angel Heredia? LOL

    Usain Bolt on Steroids?adminAugust 9, 201261

    Is Olympic Sprinter Usain Bolt on Steroids?

    As we prepare to watch the 2012 Olympic Track and Field events, all eyes are squarely on Jamaican sprinter and world record holder Usain Bolt to see if he can match or surpass his blindingly fast times from the Beijing Olympic Games in 2008. But does anyone care to investigate whether the world’s greatest sprinter — Usain Bolt is on steroids?
    Usain Bolt’s Record Breaking History

    In those 2008 Games, Bolt shocked the world by smashing the world record in the 100m and 200m races, becoming the first sprinter to ever crack the 9.7s barrier by running a 9.69s (including the early celebration that began 5m prior to the finish line) in the 100m and a 19.30s in the 200m. The following year at the 2009 World Championships, Bolt lowered his time in the 100m to a seemingly impossible 9.58s and in the 200m to a mind-numbing 19.19s.

    The Case in Favor of Usain Bolt’s Steroid Use

    In the three years since smashing two of the most famous world records in 2009, we haven’t heard much from Usain Bolt. Rumors of injuries and relationships kept him largely out of the public eye until he re-appeared on the scene at the 2011 World Championships, where he ran a more modest 19.40s in the 200m before anchoring a world record-breaking 400m relay for the Jamaican Team.
    Since 2009, Bolt hasn’t come close to touching any of his records and his performance at the 2012 Olympic Trials (in which he ran a mortal 9.86s in the 100m and 19.83s in the 200m) seemed to indicate that his best times are well behind him.
    But that would ignore the entire process of steroid cycling.
    As everyone who understands steroids knows, athletes utilize Performance Enhancing Drugs (PEDs) pursuant to a cycle that seeks to slowly elevate testosterone and growth hormone levels (and corresponding to an increase in performance) to a peak that is concurrent with a competition.
    How Usain Bolt and other Olympic Sprinters Can Beat Olympic Drug Testing

    A typical PED cycle would begin 12 weeks out from competition with the target date being the day prior to or of the competition. Along with the use of undetectable steroids and daily growth hormone injections, the athlete would also have his blood drawn on a daily basis to monitor his testosterone and rhGH ratios in an effort to keep them within Olympic World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) testing limits. Close monitoring of these ratios allow an Olympic sprinter such as Bolt to both use PEDs up to the day of competition while still comfortably submitting to multiple drug tests.
    This isn’t evidence particular to Usain Bolt, as it could just as easily describe the protocol that every Olympic sprinter is using to pass the drug tests. However, it is mentioned simply to point out how easily Olympic athletes are able to pass an Olympic-level drug test, even with the highest levels of scrutiny. The bottom line is that if an athlete is within the permissible testosterone and rhGH ratios, he is deemed clean. The reality is that any athlete who doesn’t maximize his testosterone and rhGH levels to the maximum permissible level has no chance of breaking a world record.
    For example, let’s assume that a talented NCAA sprinter has a testosterone ratio (testosterone: epitestosterone) of 1:1 which is considered normal, or average. The current WADA guidelines permit a ratio of up to 4:1. Given the fact that the only way for an NCAA sprinter to make any money sprinting is to win international competitions and garner endorsements, what reason could that NCAA sprinter possibly have for NOT quadrupling his testosterone ratio up to the maximum of 4:1? Using a number of undetectable steroid compounds, that same athlete would presumably see a major improvement in his sprint times without ever ‘testing positive’.
    And this is the folly of drug testing: It gives ‘dirty’ athletes all the ammunition they need to proclaim themselves ‘clean’ — replete with Olympic level testing results.
    Passing an Olympic Drug Test Does Not Make Usain Bolt ‘Clean’

    The worst argument that anyone can make for Usain Bolt being a clean athlete is that he has yet to fail a steroid or other drug test, despite being subjected to rigorous drug testing protocols.
    The reality is that most Olympic athletes have their blood levels so closely monitored that only an egregious miscalculation in the timing of a steroid injection or use of a masking agent (i.e. diuretics) to dilute the levels of a steroid within the blood would result in a positive test. This is the only reason why we rarely see positive tests for Olympic level athletes.
    International steroid expert Anthony Roberts told Muscleweek: “With regards to fooling the Olympic drug tests, many of the same loopholes that existed ten to twenty years ago still exist today. Until those loopholes are closed, there will always be a shadow of doubt falling on the Olympics.”
    Roberts continued, “Testosterone, hGH and most of the other highly potent anabolics are virtually undetectable — when we see a positive test and a tearfully apologetic athlete, he or she probably represents less than 1% of those who are actually using banned substances.”
    Olympic Drug Testing is a Joke

    United States Olympic Gold Medalist Marion Jones proudly proclaimed that she passed more than 160 drug tests in her career. The fact remains that she won three gold medals at the 2000 Olympics while passing the supposedly stringent requirements of Olympic WADA testing.
    And yet, despite breaking world records in the 100m and 200m sprints; despite being romantically involved with and coached by Olympic shot-putter CJ Hunter who tested positive for steroids four times leading up to the 2000 Olympics and was subsequently banned by the ITAF; despite being romantically involved with and coached by Olympic sprinter Tim Montgomery who tested positive for steroids and was subsequently banned; despite training under track coach Trevor Graham who has been banned for life from track and field; and despite her affiliation with BALCO Labs and the insistence of BALCO president Victor Conte who admitted to injecting Marion Jones with steroids, the general public and sports ‘journalists’ were still gullible enough to believe that Marion Jones was in fact, a ‘clean athlete.’
    As Marion Jones proved, testing ‘clean’ means absolutely nothing.
    Usain Bolt’s Track ‘Coach’ is a Steroid Expert
    Interestingly (and perhaps damningly) in making a case against Usain Bolt, a fact that is often ignored is that the man who worked with Victor Conte at Balco Labs and later testified against CJ Hunter, Tim Montgomery, Marion Jones, and yes — current 2012 U.S. Olympic sprinter Justin Gatlin– was a man by the name of Angel Heredia. Prior to working at BALCO, Angel Heredia was a national discus champion for Mexico. In the case against BALCO and Graham, he is referred to as ‘Source A’ and his testimony against BALCO athletes in verifying the documents that detailed the drug schedules for those athletes was crucial in obtaining convictions or confessions from those individuals.
    But BALCO drug guru Angel Heredia never served a day in prison.
    Even more suspiciously, sometime after 2008, Angel Heredia legally changed his name to Angel Hernandez.
    Pop Quiz: Why would Angel Heredia change his name to Angel Hernandez?
    Answer: Usain Bolt hired the new incarnation of Angel Heredia to become his track ‘coach’ in 2009. Unfortunately for Mr. Heredia, Google Search can be a terrible thing for a man with a past like Angel.
    Here is a video of Usain Bolt’s track coach Angel Heredia (Hernandez) obtaining steroids in Mexico and injecting growth hormone on camera for a German documentary:

    And a small piece of the interview transcript from German publication Der Spiegel’s 2008 interview with Angel Hernandez:
    SPIEGEL: Mr. Heredia, will you watch the 100 meter final in Beijing?
    Heredia: Of course. But the winner will not be clean. Not even any of the contestants will be clean. (emphasis added)
    SPIEGEL: Of eight runners …
    Heredia: … eight will be doped.
    SPIEGEL: There is no way to prove that.
    Heredia: There is no doubt about it. The difference between 10.0 and 9.7 seconds is the drugs.
    Bolt’s Coach is more of a Chemist than a Coach

    According to the New York Times, Usain Bolt’s track coach Angel Hernandez has referred to himself as a chemist, scientist and nutritionist.
    Pop Quiz #2: Why would the world’s top ‘natural’ sprinter need the services of a chemist affiliated with BALCO and multiple dirty sprinters?
    Answer: A logical response would be that Usain Bolt isn’t any more ‘clean’ than Marion Jones, Justin Gatlin, Ben Johnson, Tim Montgomery, or even Jamaican-born U.S. sprinter Debbie Dunn — who bowed out of the 2012 Olympics just days prior to the opening ceremonies when she tested positive for a testosterone derivative.
    Logic would seem to dictate that sprinters need sprint coaches, not chemists. But no, Usain Bolt needs a chemist.
    Just as those aforementioned sprinters who have broken track records before have.
    Because a great sprint coach could never help a track athlete as much as a great chemist can. Here’s more from Usain’s ‘coach’ explaining his precise skill set as it applies to ‘coaching’ in that 2008 interview:
    SPIEGEL: So you became a therapist for the athletes in matters of drugs?
    Heredia: More like a coach. Together we found out what was good for which body and what the decomposition times were. I designed schedules for cocktails and regimens that depended on the money the athletes offered me. Street drugs for little money, designer drugs for tens of thousands. Usually I sent the drugs by mail, but sometimes the athletes came to me.
    Still not convinced? Consider this New York Times article from 2008 that documented how Angel Heredia (Hernandez) was on the payroll of no less than 12 Olympic level athletes, including Olympic Gold Medalist Sprinter Maurice Greene (detecting a pattern here, no?):
    In recent interviews with The New York Times, Mr. Heredia described how and with whom he worked, sharing copies of records that appear to link him to many of the best sprinters of the last decade. Those records include e-mail exchanges of doping regimens, canceled checks, telephone recordings, shipping records, laboratory readings of blood and urine samples, and Justice Department documents.
    Among his clients, Mr. Heredia identified 12 athletes who had won a combined 26 Olympic medals and 21 world championships. Four of the 12 athletes, including Ms. Jones, had been named and barred from competition for illicit drug use. Eight of the 12 — notably, the sprinter Maurice Greene — have never been previously linked to performance-enhancing drugs.
    Mr. Greene, a two-time Olympic gold medalist and a five-time world champion, has never failed a drug test.
    Mr. Heredia showed The Times a copy of a bank transaction form showing a $10,000 wire transfer from a Maurice Greene to a relative of Mr. Heredia’s; two sets of blood-test lab reports with Mr. Greene’s name and age on them; and an e-mail message from a close friend and track-club teammate of Mr. Greene’s, attaching one of the lab reports and saying, “Angel, this is maurices results sorry it took so long.
    Why would an athlete’s own ‘coach’, errr, I mean ‘chemist’ be testing his own athlete’s blood?
    Well, if you believe the ‘coaches’, it’s to analyze the blood and determine if there are any deficits in any areas that may need to be addressed. But a chemist would just tell you that it’s to confirm that the testosterone and ghGH ratios are within the legal limits. Who would you believe?
    Would you believe Usain Bolt’s coach? If so, then you might want to consider this, from the same Times Article:
    Mr. Heredia, 33, a former Mexican national discus champion, is a secretive figure on the track circuit who describes himself as a chemist, scientist and nutritionist. The son of a chemist, Mr. Heredia received an undergraduate degree in kinesiology from Texas A&M in Kingsville, records show.
    He said he used family connections to pharmacies and labs in Mexico to help his business. For years, Mr. Heredia said, he helped his clients flout the rules and easily avoided detection. Substances like human growth hormone and the blood booster erythropoietin, or EPO, are still virtually impossible to detect, and “it is still easy to use testosterone” with fast-acting creams, he said.
    “You combine all these things — boom! — you get amazing results,” Mr. Heredia said.
    Amazing, indeed. Earlier today, Usain Bolt just became the first Olympic athlete to repeat winning Gold in the 100m and 200m sprints. His times of 9.63s in the 100m and 19.32 in the 200m are his best times since the 2009 World Championships and after his 200m victory, he boldly declared that he is “the greatest athlete who ever lived.”
    It probably doesn’t hurt that he just happens to have “the greatest chemist who ever lived” right there in his corner.
    The same type of thinking that created a problem cannot be used to solve the problem.

  • #2
    ah wheh di.. ?!

    Skengy.. is who name Angel Heredia ??

    Comment


    • #3
      Bolt should sue these clods...they dont even know who Bolt's coach is.

      Comment


      • #4
        Memo...

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        • #5
          i was going to ask the same question this morning....but this

          source http://www.yourunlikecrap.com/2012/0...-thoughts.html
          ------------------------------------------------

          Bolt, Sprinters and Steroids- My Thoughts

          Muscleweek came out with an article yesterday exposing Usain Bolt for having Angel Hernandez as a strength coach. Hernandez, who used to be Angel Heredia, is one of the chemists involved with the BALCO scandal that rocked track a decade ago. Obviously a bad sign, but not an unexpected one for me given my stance on the Racers Track Club already. What the article did not do is list many sources of information, so it comes off as rather hear-sayish. So, here is an article by Deadspin last fall with some good links for further reading and verification of the Muscleweek claims.


          These questions should not just be about Bolt, however. They shouldn't just be about Racers Track Club either. The questions need to be asked about almost the entire Olympic 100m final. Let's do a quick breakdown in order of finish of some notables from the final.


          Usain Bolt - Gold- 9.63
          The major focus of the articles. Long time member of Racers Track Club




          Yohan Blake- Silver- 9.75
          Another member of Racers. Blake has had two breakout seasons, reducing his 200m time by over a second. Has tested positive for stimulants before.




          Justin Gatlin- Bronze- 9.79
          Mr. Cream and the Clear himself. Probably has a new "massage therapist".



          Ryan Bailey- 5th- 9.88
          Trains with John Smith, whose camp had members outed by Angel Heredia/Hernandez during his testimony to avoid jail time which included Maurice Green.



          Richard Thompson- 7th- 9.98
          Another sprinter in John Smith's camp.


          None of the coaches are on the bleeding edge of sport science, but they still yield remarkable results with athletes and continually create athletes that are of a higher caliber than has ever been seen. If you hung out with a group of eight guys and 5 of them either were drug users or were very closely related to drug users, chances are you are also a drug user or are going to be labelled one anyway. It's just how things work. In a sport that is constantly decried for being dirty, why would you associate with the sources of the dirt?

          Mike Young from Elitetrack posted a great write up on some of the reasons why Jamaicans are dominant in the sprints, but I have to ask what happens when you take a country that is already great and you give them the best PEDs in the world?

          You get training camps that could field 4x100s that would win the Olympics by themselves.


          Posted by Josh at 10:12 AM
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          Labels: BALCO, olympics, sprinters, steroids
          4 comments:

          SanchezAugust 12, 2012 10:44 PM
          Good thoughts, and plenty of smoke at Gatlin's end. He mightn't have a new therapist but certainly a new coach in Dennis Mitchell since last November. 9.95+1.3 last year and 9.79 +1.5 this year means Dennis has found something that Loren Seagrave and Brooks Johnson couldn't. For neither Mitchell's two year ban for high test in 1999, or testimony on his HGH use from his and Gatlin's former coach Trevor Graham at the BALCO trial was USATF the source, as they upheld the infamous beer and sex excuse leaving IAAF to intervene in 1999, and BALCO was down to USADA.

          Something must have clicked when Kellie Wells went to Mitchell, as she shot from 13.26 at 24 to 12.58 at age 26, and Dennis' wife Damu Cherry once made similar improvements, served a two year steroid ban in 2003, then came back to set further PR's. Coach Mitchell like John Smith is welcome to get involved in coaches education, do interviews on his training methods and so on, but I remain wary of former known cheats with suspicious performances across the board.

          Reply

          JoshAugust 13, 2012 11:34 AM
          Agreed, and that right there is the crux of my argument. I would absolutely love for these athletes to be clean. Track on the whole will be hurt if they are dirty and I want this sport to actually become popular again in the U.S. (and not just when there are Olympic medals to be won). But track needs to step up their doping controls if they don't want these sort of connections being made.

          I think the U.K. had it right with one positive and you are done for life. If the IAAF truly wanted this sport to be clean, then any coach of an athlete that competes at the national level or higher should have to be subject to background checks (including massage therapists, nutritionists, etc). Make entire teams responsible and when smoke is spotted don't wait for a fire. Immediately sanction said training group. Smith's camp, for example would recieve a sanction for the Heredia link, regardless of a positive or not. The next hint of smoke from that camp counts as a positive and the entire camp is then suspended from competing for the rest of the year (or longer). That's just one idea, but I feel that it needs to be an all or nothing policy with group accountability to force other athletes to make sure their training partners are clean.

          Reply

          CU RunningAugust 13, 2012 1:18 PM
          Hey man,

          My name is Ryan and I'm an intern at Flotrack. Didn't spot any contact info on the blog, so wondering if maybe we could exchange emails and we could talk about you maybe doing some guest blogging on the Flo. Love the blog, get back to me: Rysterner@gmail.com

          Reply

          Brian JamesAugust 14, 2012 9:04 AM
          Great article. I would love to see track and field cleaned up, but the reality is, money talks. All these super-human performances generate ratings and money. Bolt & Co. bring far too much money and attention to the Sport and the Olympics for them to ever out them. A Gold medal winning time of 9.63 is way more exciting to most, than a Gold medal winning time of 9.92.

          Reply
          Last edited by Skeng DX; August 14, 2012, 05:57 PM.

          Comment


          • #6
            yes....he should

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            • #7
              ANOTHER

              ---> http://chicago.cbslocal.com/2012/08/...qBQ7Ag.twitter

              Jamaica’s Yohan Blake, who just won the silver in the 100 and 200, tested positive for a performance-enhancing drug prior to the 2009 World Championships. Teammates Julian Dunkley and Steve Mullings have also been caught doping.
              yohan a get a "beating"

              Comment


              • #8
                I guess they figure the best way to deal with it is to ignore it.

                I wish somebody would make a statement about this Hernandez guy. Does Bolt or Racers even know him or had anything at all to do with him?
                "‎It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men" - Frederick Douglass

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                • #9
                  Yohan tested positive for PEDs ???

                  When dem mean Teamates ??

                  Ah wheh di.. !?

                  lol ! woiee !

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                  • #10
                    tell Adidas to clean it up!

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                    • #11
                      Before Bolt or his people go chasing after these clowns, I think they should checkout this website. I've never heard of it before. Do they have money to payout from lawsuit? They could simply be looking for some free publicity.
                      Hey .. look at the bright side .... at least you're not a Liverpool fan! - Lazie 2/24/10 Paul Marin -19 is one thing, 20 is a whole other matter. It gets even worse if they win the UCL. *groan*. 05/18/2011.MU fans naah cough, but all a unuh a vomit?-Lazie 1/11/2015

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                      • #12
                        Adidas revenues are 20 Billion per year.. I think they are on top of things, they don't need my help..

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                        • #13
                          no.......but if every US article keep linking Blake to PEDs.......them might drop him....this is CBS enuh

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                          • #14
                            And that's the danger of new media. One site report some misinformation and before long everybody linking or referencing that story. Repeat it enough times and it almost doesn't matter if it's true or not.
                            "‎It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men" - Frederick Douglass

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                            • #15
                              It will only get worse. The USA was embarassed by Jamaica in the men's sprints 100, 200, and 4 by 1 and by Grenada in the 400m and Bahamas in the 4 by 4. Then we got the womens 100 and 3rd place....expect the backlash!

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