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Dagger

Posted: Wed Jul 09, 2014 2:18 pm
by Screw_Michigan
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A new book about New York Yankees' third baseman Alex Rodriguez's use of performance-enhancing drugs throughout his career includes revelations about another sports superstar: Tiger Woods.

Released Tuesday, Blood Sport: Alex Rodriguez, Biogenesis and the Quest to End Baseball’s Steroid Era, co-authored by Tim Elfrink of the Miami New Times and Gus-Garcia Roberts of Newsday, claims that the Canadian sports doctor Anthony Galea who treated Rodriguez also visited Woods 14 times between January and August 2009 and charged Woods a total of $76,012 as he recovered from knee surgery following his 2008 U.S. Open victory. Previous reports had identified only four or five visits.

In 2011, Galea pled guilty to smuggling human growth hormone and other drugs into the United States to treat professional athletes. Both Woods and Galea have said that Woods only received only legal platelet-rich plasma therapy from Galea.

The book also reports that according to the Florida Department of Health, Dr. Mark Lindsay, an associate of Galea's who also treated Rodriguez, visited Woods' 49 times from September 2008 to October 2009 and charged Woods' $118,979.

From late 2008 through 2009, when Woods was facing the worst injury of his career and Rodriguez was sidelined with a lingering hip problem, they sometimes talked abut the cutting-edge techniques of the two Canadian physicians treating both of them at the same time: Anthony Galea and Mark Lindsay.

Hank Haney, Woods' former swing coach, who has been one of Woods' most vocal critics since they stopped working together in 2010, told the Golf Channel that he never saw anything out of the ordinary in Galea's treatment of Woods.

"I was there and watched the whole procedure," Haney said. "There was never anything that went into Tiger Woods's body that didn't come out of his body. They take blood out, they spin it, they inject the plasma back in. I totally believe that Tiger Woods has never taken any performance-enhancing drugs."

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Read more: http://www.golf.com/tour-and-news/tiger ... z36ysKp9Or

Re: Dagger

Posted: Wed Jul 09, 2014 6:16 pm
by Dinsdale
First, do you even follow golf beyond hating on Tiger? Play it? Watch it? Are you able to name 5 players in the top 10?

That's what I thought. What a pathetic little man you are.

And a big name athlete was treated by guys who specialize in treating injured big name athletes? This is damning evidence... how? When Tiger's #1 hater (Haney should be your idol) says he didn't juice it up?

You need psychiatric help, dude.

Re: Dagger

Posted: Tue Oct 07, 2014 11:40 am
by Felix
Dinsdale wrote:First, do you even follow golf beyond hating on Tiger? Play it? Watch it? Are you able to name 5 players in the top 10?
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here's his problem....views of his swing over the years.....see any issues with the most recent? I do.....

Re: Dagger

Posted: Tue Oct 07, 2014 4:52 pm
by BSmack
You mean other than minimal flex in the knees and he's noticeably more erect in the last picture as opposed to from 94 on where he perfectly emulates the stance Hogan taught in the Five Fundamentals? Yea.

Re: Dagger

Posted: Tue Oct 07, 2014 7:03 pm
by Dinsdale
The recent one looks like a guy whose knees and back have seen better days. The weight isn't shifting the same, for sure.

Re: Dagger

Posted: Fri Oct 10, 2014 3:32 pm
by Felix
BSmack wrote:You mean other than minimal flex in the knees and he's noticeably more erect in the last picture
Dinsdale wrote:The recent one looks like a guy whose knees and back have seen better days. The weight isn't shifting the same, for sure.
exactly, his shoulder and hip muscles are no longer generating the power, it's more of an arm swing......the only thing that's saved him from completely going in the tank is his incredible hand/eye coordination.....the last swing looks like he's afraid to move through the shot, like he's protecting his back and knees which we know he is......the problem is that in his younger years he generated so much torque it was eventually going to catch up to him and it has.....McIlroy will have the same issues in a few years......

now contrast Tigers swing with that of the guy I think has one of the best swings I've even seen......

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he still swings the same as when he first came to prominence......but you can see there is no violent torque, just a simple turn and he allows the large muscles to generate the power for him......they don't call him the Big Easy for nothing.....

Re: Dagger

Posted: Wed Oct 15, 2014 7:56 pm
by Go Coogs'
Yeah, his lower body is doing very little work and it's causing him to drop his right shoulder on transition. He's not letting his hips and torso do the work.