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Showing posts with label testing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label testing. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Logistical hurdles cleared, NFL to begin game-day drug testing

NEW YORK -- The NFL is adding game-day testing for performance-enhancing substances -- but not recreational drugs -- this season under the new collective bargaining agreement.

The league's senior vice president of law and labor policy, Adolpho Birch, said Tuesday on a conference call with reporters that tests weren't conducted on past game days "because of logistical issues involved, much more so than any philosophical issues."


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Birch, who oversees the NFL's drug program, added that the league had developed a way to test that "is not overly disruptive to the clubs and that respects the game-day process."

Birch wouldn't say where talks between the NFL and the players' union stand -- or even if they have started -- about details that need to be worked out before the league can introduce random, year-round blood testing for human growth hormone.

The league and union agreed last week that HGH testing can become part of the sport's drug program under the new, 10-year collective bargaining agreement that was ratified by players Thursday. But first, issues such as the appeals process and how tests are taken must be negotiated.

"The key to this testing is the randomness of it, and that every player is subject to and eligible for testing on a year-round basis, with no notice," Birch said.

The only limitation on the number of tests is that a player may be tested a maximum of six times each offseason, from February until the start of training camp.

"I would certainly expect players will be tested in an amount that will be meaningful," Birch said. "But more important, the idea is not so much the number of tests performed, but it is the constant threat of testing that provides the key to deterrence under this particular program."

Copyright 2011 by The Associated Press


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Friday, October 8, 2010

Browns will see how Delhomme responds after testing ankle

BEREA, Ohio -- Browns quarterback Jake Delhomme is testing his right ankle again in practice and will start Sunday against Atlanta if it responds favorably to the extra workload.

Cleveland coach Eric Mangini said Wednesday that Delhomme and backup Seneca Wallace, who has started the past three Browns games, would split reps in practice in preparation for the game against the Falcons and that Delhomme situation was work, wait and see.

"I would say that's the approach that we are going with," Mangini said. "However, we have to go through today with more reps. It will be more reps today than it was last week. So, then, how he wakes up tomorrow and what that looks like will give us a better idea if he is ready to go or if we are just a step closer."

Delhomme, signed by the Browns to a two-year contract in March, has been inactive in Cleveland's last three games after badly spraining his right ankle in the season-opening loss Sept. 12 at Tampa Bay. He returned to practice last Thursday on a limited basis, but his injury didn't improve enough for him to play in last week's win against Cincinnati.

Delhomme seemed more mobile during the 30 minutes of practice open to reporters Wednesday.

"His ability to function is at his normal level -- his ability to move, to go through all the normal mechanics of playing QB ...," Mangini said. "You are really just looking at his normal operation at this point to what it was and what things bother him, what things don't bother him, and get a gauge as the week goes on. If (he can't), you play Seneca."

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Delhomme's familiarity with the Falcons -- he played them twice a year during most of his seven-year tenure with the Carolina Panthers, who released him in March -- would be helpful this week, Mangini acknowledged.

"There are some positives there, but things have changed, too," Mangini said. "Over any year to year you get some changes, but it definitely helps to have familiarity with the personnel. He starts at maybe a higher point (than) maybe a lot of us who haven't seen them twice a year."

The Associated Press contributed to this report.


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