proffate said:
retired NBA players reminisce about the drugs they took to play basketball:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DypUbTHsTh8#t=399
This is a grossly negligent misrepresentation of this video and the concomitant suggestion or intended message that there was/is widespread drug use in basketball in order "to play basketball"
The vast majority of the video deals with 7 former NBA players as to the reasons they retired. At the end of the video, Steve Kerr mentions for the last 2 seasons of his career he took Vioxx.
Vioxx is an anti-inflammatory, non-steroid anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) and not a narcotic. Although in the video Kerr says he "thinks" it was a PED, Kerr is wrong. It is not a performance enhancing drug. It has never been on the WADA list of performance enhancing drugs. It was pulled from the market in 2004 because it was linked to heart disease and strokes.
It was an effective anti-inflammatory and pain reliever that brought relief for pain as would aspirin, ibuprofen or naproxen, other NSAIDs all over the counter meds in North America. that are not banned and used by athletes routinely, because they provide relief, but not a performance enhancing benefit. Vioxx did require a prescription.
A second player, Isiah Thomas refers to having taken DMSO or Dimethyl sulfoxide during his career. In medicine, DMSO is predominantly used as a topical analgesic, as an anti-inflammatory, and an antioxidant. Similarly DMSO is not a PED, has never been on the WADA list of prohibited drugs and is not performance enhancing
Of the 7 players in the video only these 2 mentioned anything about drugs they took for pain relief. None of the others "reminisced about drugs they took "to play basketball"
Dear Wiggo
Thanks for the vid! A good example of why doping should not ever be condoned or encouraged:
This comment is the classic example of how when one poster misrepresents a drug as a PED when they are not, another poster in ignorance assumes and proposes the drugs referred to constitute doping when it did not.
At the same time I agree with Dear Wiggo that doping(actual doping, not the use of drugs that are not prohibited) should never be condoned or encouraged.