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2006-12-04 07:36:27 · 16 answers · asked by minime09 1 in Sports Other - Sports

16 answers

no...sports should be based on natural ability not who can afford the best steriod.

2006-12-04 07:38:53 · answer #1 · answered by sxiecat 2 · 1 0

I don't think anabolic steroids should be legal, but I do think they are getting way out of hand with banning every performance enhancer. Next thing, they'll say that vitamins won't be allowed and everyone should be all-natural. When McGwire took Andro, it was legal. Then when all of the 'Steroid' talk started with him, they all of a sudden want to make it illegal. It's gotten ridiculous.

2006-12-04 15:47:49 · answer #2 · answered by DJ 5 · 0 0

Steroids are dangerous for two reasons: they are illegal, and they can damage a person's health, especially if used in large doses over time.

Although they may build muscle, steroids can produce very serious side effects in both males and females. Using steroids for a long time can negatively affect the reproductive systems. In males, steroids can reduce the amount of sperm produced in the testicles and even reduce the size of the testicles. Steroids also can cause impotence in males.

Females who use steroids may have problems with their menstrual cycles because steroids can disrupt the maturation and release of eggs from the ovaries. This disruption can cause long-term problems with fertility.

Steroids taken for an extended period of time can also:

stunt growth in teens by causing the growth plates in the bones to mature too fast and fuse
cause irreversible liver damage
enlarge the heart muscles
cause violent, aggressive mood swings
contribute to heart disease and increase cholesterol and lipid levels
increase breast growth in males, especially teens
create irreversible stretch marks
heighten a person's tendency to lose hair
cause muscles to ache
In addition to these, teen girls and women risk additional side effects:

permanent effects of male hair growth or male-pattern baldness
deepening of the voice
enlargement of the clitoris
The health problems caused by steroids may not appear for years after the steroids are taken. The risk of steroids causing bones to fuse early and preventing a teen from reaching full growth potential is significant - and at an all-time high. The National Institutes of Drug Abuse estimates in recent studies that 325,000 teenage boys and 175,000 teenage girls are using steroids.

"A testosterone measurement of more than 200 nanograms per milliliter would signal steroid abuse, and I have seen athletes with levels in the thousands," says Larry Bowers, MD, a steroid expert. "Although it may take 20 years, case studies of long-term steroid use indicate negative effects on almost every system of the body."

In addition to the health risks, steroids are illegal. Drug testing for all athletes has become more prevalent, and athletes who fail a drug test for steroids can face numerous legal consequences: jail time, monetary fines, exclusion from an event or from the team, or seizure of trophies or medals.

Although the health problems associated with steroid use are well documented, it's important to remember that the rules about the legal use of steroids can be confusing. Even professional athletes don't always agree on the issue. For instance, when Mark McGwire freely admitted that he used androstenedione on the way to setting baseball's single-season home run record, he wasn't kicked out of the league or stripped of his achievement. That's because the use of andro - what some people in sports still consider a dietary supplement, although it is proven to be a form of anabolic steroid - is still permitted in Major League Baseball and National League Hockey. But andro is banned in other sports organizations. The International Olympic Committee, the National Football League, the National Basketball Association, the National Collegiate Athletic Association, the Association of Tennis Professionals, and most high school athletic associations currently ban the use of androstenedione.

Andro is banned as an illegal substance in Canada, but in the United States can be easily obtained as a dietary supplement

2006-12-04 16:37:11 · answer #3 · answered by vikingkid051 1 · 0 0

What sports? Body building? Tennis? Biking? Football?

2006-12-04 15:44:08 · answer #4 · answered by shake_um 5 · 0 1

even though it doesnt help a player hit a ball it changes a long pop fly to a home run and it is more for pitchers any ways look a CLEMENS STILL KEEP THEM OUT OF THE GAME

2006-12-04 15:39:42 · answer #5 · answered by Wasabi 3 · 0 0

Might as well because a lot of players take steroids and cheat.. There will be more excitement if everyone had steriods, and there won't be anymore cheating.

2006-12-04 15:38:49 · answer #6 · answered by SpeedySteel 2 · 0 2

yea if filling your bats and balls with lead and running around bases on segways are legal why not. Hell have robots do the work.

2006-12-04 15:37:48 · answer #7 · answered by Karrien Sim Peters 5 · 0 1

no steroids dont make muscle they break muscle. they should be illegal in all sports.

2006-12-04 15:37:41 · answer #8 · answered by spikey200maximum 3 · 2 0

I think no because they harm your body and they make your heart bigger and you can die from it like eddie the wwe legend he took them and he die sadly. So basicly if you are going to take them its like say you want to die.

2006-12-04 15:45:49 · answer #9 · answered by Advice helper 2 · 0 0

absolutely. Lets turn every athlete into a pimple backed, balding, musclebound, tiny balled, roid raging human. That would make life fun for all of us!

2006-12-04 15:38:26 · answer #10 · answered by Jay 2 · 2 2

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