Saturday 14 January 2012

MLB's HGH testing not effective

On November 22, 2011, the recent feat of Major League Baseball of extended "labor peace" with the Major League Players Association was reached.
According to the terms of the latest basic agreement between the parties, the MLB has apparently won out in its attempt to curb illicit use of human growth hormone (HGH) by its players.
The lockouts by both the NFL and NBA this year perhaps did not go by unnoticed by MLB brass in its seemingly under-the-radar collective bargaining talks with the MLBPA this past fall. MLB attempted to show up the other leagues' rather unkempt labor relations.
And MLB Commissioner Bud Selig made it quite clear by way of his public display of self-aggrandizement during the week following a new collective bargaining agreement (CBA) was reached, that his is the first North American professional sports league to agree to such a test for HGH. And perhaps it was indeed Selig's latest and greatest coup yet, in such a pronouncement, however yet to be realized.
Article 39, Sec. 7 (b) of the NFL's CBA states: "The parties confirm that the Program on Anabolic Steroids and related Substances will include both annual blood testing and random blood testing for human growth hormone, with discipline for positive tests at the same level as for steroids."

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