Benotti69 said:cos Brazil are going to win it at home.
I will be very surprised if Brazil dont make it to the final.
You think they're going to win, or they'll be in the final?
Benotti69 said:cos Brazil are going to win it at home.
I will be very surprised if Brazil dont make it to the final.
kingjr said:You think they're going to win, or they'll be in the final?
true story.Briant_Gumble said:The point was there has obviously been a dramatic drop off in form.
As if I was referencing a 4-0 win against Italy as proof they were receiving undeserved plaudits.
Why would I even begin to predict a flop after a 4-0 win in the final. Completely goes against what I was saying.
If they lose to Australia this will be as much an unprecedented decline as any decline ever.
MrRoboto said:As far as I remember, they were extremely lucky getting through the Italy match though. As in suspiciously lucky.
roundabout said:102,81km today vs 109,90km for Chile
102,04km in game 1
although I have no idea which numbers would be normal
the sceptic said:looks like south american teams have the best "preparation" for this tournament. Not that that should be a surprise to anyone.
Benotti69 said:I think they have been chosen to win it. Anything can happen to foil that, but from what i have seen the refs are strongly favouring Brazil.
According to this (dunno what sources he used):roundabout said:102,81km today vs 109,90km for Chile
102,04km in game 1
although I have no idea which numbers would be normal
It was in his Iron tablets he thinks? Would make total sense. If the iron doesn't fix your anemia, the EPO will.elduggo said:Irish sprinter fails drugs test
http://balls.ie/athletics/irish-sprinter-fails-drugs-test/
we're pretty *** at the sprinting. Makes you wonder what the big guns are on if some nobody irish sprinter feels the need to take EPO.
poor guy fails the IQ test.elduggo said:Irish sprinter fails drugs test
http://balls.ie/athletics/irish-sprinter-fails-drugs-test/
we're pretty *** at the sprinting. Makes you wonder what the big guns are on if some nobody irish sprinter feels the need to take EPO.
no wonder he started using after that result (if he wasn't using before).Colvert is best known for narrowly missing out on qualification for the 200m at the 2012 London Olympics. He finished with a time of 20.57 seconds, just two hundreths of a second shy of making the cut for the games.
Benotti69 said:Looks like the Dutch football squad hired Leinders for the world cup......![]()
SpannerBender said:http://nationalreport.net/netherlands-continue-world-cup-despite-doping-scandal/
Old dog, old tricks.
Glad to see it's not being swept under the carpet!
fuzzydunlop3 said:that one's a hoax. i fell for it too
The Hitch said:The first few sentences of the article should be engraved on the front door of any anti doping agency
Anti doping still operates under this myth that athletes are inherently good and only a few bad eggs would dope.
It shockingly underestimates the power of the will to win - hillariously used as an argument for cleanliness: eek:
RobbieCanuck said:"Objective: To test Goldman's dilemma on a general population sample by asking whether they would take the Faustian bargain of a drug that guaranteed sporting success but would result in their death in 5 years' time. Between 1982 and 1995 a bi-annual survey using this dilemma suggested half of all elite athletes would take the drug."
However the results are radically different than found by Goldman in 1995,
"Results: Only two of a sample of 250 reported they would take the bargain offered by the dilemma."
"Conclusions: Athletes differ markedly from the general population in response to the dilemma."
that would be news if he tested negativeStyrbjornSterki said: