Re:
arcus said:
Interview with Deborah Davis, one of the journos involved in the "dark-side" documentary... Make of it what you will.
http://www.120sports.com/video/v160564828/1on1-with-deborah-davies
Many thanks for the link.
Right off the bat, she makes the key point: Manning still hasn’t responded to the allegation that his wife received HGH. Davis says they don’t have documents to confirm this, but claims they have “confirmation that HGH was sent from the clinic to Florida.” I wish the interviewers had followed up on this. Does she just mean that some HGH was sent to someone in Florida around that time? By itself, that much information doesn’t seem very significant. But if they know this much, presumably there is a way to confirm that HGH was sent to Ashley Manning, if it really were. Guyer must have the records.
But this claim is significant in another sense. Guyer is an anti-aging clinic. As others have pointed out, if you really need HGH, you should be getting it from a doctor/clinic specializing in the relatively rare disorder for which it’s legal to use. It seems unlikely that Guyer had a legal basis to ship HGH to anyone. Davis in fact later emphasizes that while anti-aging clinics have been known to prescribe HGH, that is illegal.
She also claims when she called the Guyer Institute and asked about Sly, they looked up the records and told her that Sly did work there in 2011. This confirms what Sly said, but contradicts what some Guyer official told the press after the report came out. So this discrepancy is very interesting, and certainly suggests, at the least, that record-keeping is not very good at the Guyer, and at worst, they lied when asked about this after the report came out.
In the followup analysis, the two interviewing reporters bring up the possibility that HGH was used when the Mannings underwent in vitro fertilization. I can understand Manning wanting to protect their privacy, but a) HGH is not legal for even this use; and b) as a professional athlete for whom HGH use is banned, Manning is surely aware that if HGH were sent to his household for any reason, it would appear suspicious, and if in fact his wife rather than he were using it, he would be expected to point this out, regardless of how he felt about the privacy issue.
As long as Manning continues to stonewall the question of whether his wife received HGH, I'd say that is the best case scenario. That he wasn't doping, but his wife was using the drug illegally, and they don't want to get the clinic in trouble for revealing this.