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Thứ Tư, 11 tháng 11, 2015

MMA Fighter Ronda Rousey Endorses Bernie Sanders For President

Mixed Martial Arts champion Ronda Rousey is voting for Democratic candidate Bernie Sanders for president, she told Maxim Tuesday.


Ricardo Moraes / Reuters

The undefeated UFC Women's Bantamweight Champion said in an interview with Maxim that she is voting for Sanders "because he doesn’t take any corporate money."

"I don’t think politicians should be allowed to take money for their campaigns from outside interests,” Rousey said.

Sanders, an independent senator from Vermont, is running against former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton for the Democratic nomination.

"If he doesn’t win against Hillary, then I’ll probably vote for a third party again,” Rousey said. "To be honest, in 2012 I was against both candidates and so I just picked any third party because I thought if more people voted for third parties then they’d have to take third parties seriously.”


Lord Coe Questioned Over Russian Doping Report

Channel 4 News presenter Jon Snow asked the IAAF president: “You were either asleep on the job or corrupt. Which is it?”

Lord Coe, president of world athletics governing body, is facing growing calls to explain exactly how much he knew about doping and corruption within the organisation and the sport in the last decade.

Lord Coe, president of world athletics governing body, is facing growing calls to explain exactly how much he knew about doping and corruption within the organisation and the sport in the last decade.

Channel 4 News

An independent commission set up by the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) found that Russian middle-distance runners had used drugs to enhance their chances of winning.

The commission's report said that both the Russian anti-doping agency and the IAAF were guilty of a "laissez-faire" attitude towards doping.

Coe took over from longstanding IAAF president Lamine Diack in August and praised the Senegalese 82-year-old for his "shrewd stewardship" and said he'd remain the organisation's "spiritual president".

These remarks have come back to haunt Coe after Diack was arrested by French prosecutors alongside two others last week, amid allegations of a cover-up.

Coe served as Diack's vice-president from 2007 to this year, raising questions of exactly how much he knew about the organisation's alleged involvement in doping.

In a testy interview with Channel 4 News on Monday night, Coe faced a barrage of questions about his conduct and knowledge of any wrongdoing but maintained that his focus was on sorting out the problem.

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"My responsibility now is to create a sport that is transparent, accountable, and responsible. If there are failings in our anti-doping processes then we will fix them," he said.

"If there are corporate governances that should have been in place, particularly given the severity of the criminal allegations that were made at the beginning of the week, then yes, we all need to look at ourselves."

Coe said that the WADA commission found that "rogue elements may well have infiltrated the organisation" and this meant there may "not necessarily be a wholesale systemic failure of our systems".

In August Coe described allegations of suspicious test results from some athletes as "a war on my sport".


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Kremlin Says Claims Of State-Sponsored Doping In Russian Athletics Are "Groundless"

Russian President Vladimir Putin attends the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics Closing Ceremony.

Pool / Getty Images

A spokesman for Russia's President Vladimir Putin on Tuesday described accusations in a sensational report released by the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) that found Russian athletes had engaged in widespread, state-approved doping as "groundless."

"Whenever any charges are made, there must be some evidence they rely on," Kremlin spokesman Dmitriy Peskov said. "As long as there has been no proof, it is hard to react to any accusations, which look rather groundless."

When asked the Kremlin's opinion on why WADA had made charges against Russian sports stars, Peskov said: "It’s none of our business to ponder over the causes of such scandals," Russia's TASS Agency reported.

Sports Minister Vitaly Mutko had earlier told Russian TV that the issues brought up by the WADA report surrounding a Moscow anti-doping laboratory were either correctible, or lacking in evidence.

WADA suspended its accreditation for the lab — where an alleged mass destruction of doping samples took place — on Tuesday, according to AP.

Mutko's ministry said Tuesday that Russia was "fully committed to the fight against doping in sport" and would work more closely with WADA, according to the BBC.

The ministry said it was "fully aware of the problems" in the lab, but added that the state did "not interfere with Rusada [the country's anti-doping agency] and anti-doping laboratory work."

Monday's 355-page report detailed “widespread cheating through the use of doping substances" among Russian athletes, and said that “it would be naive in the extreme” to assume that the state had not been involved or tacitly approved of the cheating.

LINK: Read the full report

LINK: Russian Athletes Should Be Suspended Due To “Widespread” Cheating, Says Anti-Doping Agency

LINK: Pressure Grows On International Athletics President Over Anti-Doping Report


Tons Of Elite Athletes Are Doping — Here's Why Science Won’t Catch Them All

Simone Raineri / Via Flickr: simoneraineri

Track and field athletics is back in the news — for all the wrong reasons. On Monday, an independent commission convened by the World Anti-Doping Agency concluded that Russia should be suspended from international competition, after finding evidence of systematic doping.

But this isn’t a story of sports being as dirty as they ever were. In fact, a quiet revolution has taken place over the past few years, as anti-doping scientists have begun to look for the way in which the human body responds to doping, rather than trying to find traces of the drugs themselves.

Experts say that this new approach — dubbed the athlete biological passport — has created a more level playing field, putting the drug cheats on the defensive after decades of dominance. But while the passports have reduced the doses that cheats can take without getting caught, statistical uncertainties mean they can’t catch all the dopers. So expecting science to clean up sports is an approach that is ultimately doomed to fail — especially if the corruption that allowed Russian athletes to cheat is not rooted out.

“There is no technological way out of this,” Michael Joyner, an exercise physiologist at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, told BuzzFeed News.

For decades, anti-doping science was based on detecting traces of banned substances in athletes’ urine. But that meant the testers were playing a losing game of catch-up: As soon as a new test became available, the athletes would ditch that particular performance-enhancing drug and move on to a new one.

These drugs fall into three main categories. Best-known are anabolic steroids that mimic the male sex hormone testosterone, building muscle. Growth hormones are similarly thought to increase muscle and reduce body fat. Drugs such as erythropoetin, or EPO, meanwhile, boost the blood’s ability to carry oxygen — which explains their use in endurance sports like cycling.

The idea behind the biological passports is not to look for banned drugs or their breakdown products, but instead to regularly monitor athletes’ physiology for abnormalities that indicate cheating — regardless of what drug is responsible. The World Anti-Doping Agency introduced the blood-doping module of its biological passport in 2009, and followed up with a module for anabolic steroids in 2014. A module for growth hormones is still being developed.

For EPO and other forms of blood doping, testers take regular samples and record various measures of red blood cells and the overall concentration of the oxygen-carrying protein hemoglobin. Over time, a profile for each measure is composed for every athlete, and statistical tests are used to detect deviations from the athlete’s norms that indicate a doping violation.

The International Cycling Union led the way with the blood doping biological passports, introducing them in 2008. And they seem to have helped clean up a sport that had a terrible reputation for doping — even before seven-time Tour de France winner Lance Armstrong’s fall from grace.

From 2001 to 2007, blood samples taken from elite cyclists indicated that around 10% had “extreme” numbers of immature red blood cells, suggesting that they had taken a drug like EPO. But by 2009, scientists with the International Cycling Union found that this number had dropped to less than 3%.

Abnormal biological passport results usually trigger conventional testing for prohibited substances. But even without a positive result for a known drug, a passport violation is enough to secure a ban. The current list of almost 300 track and field athletes banned from competition for doping violations, for example, includes 20 who were sanctioned solely on the basis of biological passport results.

Javier Soriano / AFP / Getty Images / Via gettyimages.com

No one knows for sure how many elite athletes are doping — and the numbers will vary widely from sport to sport and from country to country. However, a study of German elite athletes from various Olympic sports, using an anonymous survey carefully designed to draw out truthful answers, put the figure who doped in the 2005 season at between 20% and 39%. A follow-up study in the 2008 season produced similar results.

So why aren’t biological passports doing a better job of catching the cheats? One answer is corruption: Monday’s report into Russia’s systematic doping (which the Kremlin contests) concludes that coaches illicitly obtained details of suspicious biological passport tests against their athletes.

But there’s a more fundamental limitation, which can’t be avoided so long as biological passports are used to impose stringent sanctions for doping offenses.

Thresholds for a suspicious test are set high, to make false positives decreasingly rare. Although the test would catch most of the cheaters by lowering the threshold, Joyner said, that would also mean that up to 3% of the passport results flagged as suspicious would implicate athletes who had not actually doped.

Athletes know this, and take advantage of it. “I think the days of industrial-strength doping are over,” said Joyner. But it’s been replaced by what drug testers call “microdosing,” in which cheats use smaller doses of performance-enhancing drugs, confident that this is unlikely to cause a problem with their biological passport.

“People are trying to come under the radar by administering minute doses,” Joris Delanghe, a clinical chemist at Ghent University in Belgium, told BuzzFeed News.

When the difference between gold and silver is measured in fractions of a second, even a small performance boost can make an important difference. The potential for continued cheating was demonstrated in 2011 by a team from the Science and Industry Against Blood Doping consortium in Queensland, Australia. They injected 10 volunteers twice weekly with small doses of EPO for up to 12 weeks, boosting hemoglobin levels by 10%. Yet none of the participants would have been flagged as suspicious by a biological passport, given current thresholds for detection.

An example of biological passport results.

Fabrice Coffrini / AFP / Getty Images / Via gettyimages.com

Ironically, the scientist who pioneered the concept of biological passports never actually intended them to be used to impose lengthy bans from competition. In 1999, Jim Stray-Gundersen, who is today sports science adviser to the U.S. Ski and Snowboard Association, developed a similar blood-testing protocol called Safe and Fair Events, or SAFE.

The original idea, Stray-Gundersen told BuzzFeed News, was to bar athletes with suspicious results from competing in individual events, framing the effort in terms of their own safety. (Blood doping is dangerous because boosting numbers of red blood cells increases the risk of clots, heart attacks, and stroke.)

Although Stray-Gundersen initially set the thresholds high, he aimed to reduce them over time, as athletes came to trust the program, and saw that it reduced the prevalence of doping. “I wanted to get away from the cops and robbers game,” Stray-Gundersen said.

At the time, most sporting federations weren’t interested, and only the International Skating Union introduced the SAFE program.

Even though biological passports have departed from his original vision of subtly encouraging good behavior, Stray-Gundersen believes that they have curbed the drug cheats’ worst excesses.

“Now the clean athlete does have a chance,” he said.

LINK: Kremlin Says Claims Of State-Sponsored Doping In Russian Athletics Are “Groundless”

LINK: Russian Athletes Should Be Suspended Due To “Widespread” Cheating, Says Anti-Doping Agency


U.S. Soccer Announces New Youth Player Rules To Cut Down On Concussions

Jewel Samad / Getty Images

Several national soccer organizations on Monday announced sweeping changes aimed at reducing player concussions among youth players.

According to a joint statement issued by the organizations, U.S. Soccer will enact a comprehensive Player Safety Campaign in the coming months in an effort to reduce the number of concussions among youth players who continuously head the ball. It will also address other health and safety initiatives, such as heat-related illnesses and injury prevention.

Two highlights of the Player Safety Campaign are the elimination of heading for children younger than 11, and limitations placed on heading the ball in practice for players aged 11 to 13.

The new initiative follows a lawsuit filed against U.S. Soccer and several other national organizations. The plaintiffs in the case, represented by attorney Steve Berman, never sought financial damages. And in the joint statement, Berman said that in light of the upcoming campaign, his clients would not pursue further legal action.

Citing the original lawsuit, the New York Times reported that in 2010, nearly 50,000 high school soccer players were diagnosed with concussions. That figure was more than the combined concussions sustained by high school baseball, basketball, softball, and football players.

U.S. Soccer CEO and Secretary General Dan Flynn said in a statement that the organization worked with its medical science committee, "which includes experts in the field of concussion diagnosis and management," as well as technical advisors and youth members to develop "a true consensus-based program."

Increased awareness and education of concussions among players, parents, and coaches, as well as revised substitution protocols for players with head injuries, will also be addressed in the campaign.

Details of how the organization plans to implement the new rules will be announced in the next 30 days, according to U.S. Soccer. As noted by NBC Sports, youth soccer clubs are scattered throughout metropolitan, suburban, and rural areas of the U.S., which could pose a challenge in the implementation of the new rules.


Thứ Ba, 10 tháng 11, 2015

Cristiano Ronaldo's Process For Taking Fan Selfies Is Absoltuley Hilarious

But ruthlessly efficient.

Football superstar, underwear model and animated wax doll Cristiano Ronaldo is not only very photogenic, he's one hell of a selfie taker.

vine.co

Just look at that ruthless selfie efficiency.

Just look at that ruthless selfie efficiency.

vine.co

The Golden Boot winner was in London overnight for the premiere of Ronaldo, a documentary about the superstar's life.

The Golden Boot winner was in London overnight for the premiere of Ronaldo, a documentary about the superstar's life.

Ian Gavan / Getty Images


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21 Of The Most Badass Moments From Canadian Women's Hockey

Playing like a girl since 1890.

When Shannon Szabados — at only 16 years old — became the first woman to play in the Western Hockey League.

When Shannon Szabados — at only 16 years old — became the first woman to play in the Western Hockey League.

She played 4 pre-season games for the Tri-City Americans. And the starting goaltender that season? Carey Price.

Some ~perspective~.

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And continues to fight, and shut down, all the sexism strewn her way.

And continues to fight, and shut down, all the sexism strewn her way.

Twitter: @mpah

O, and you might have heard of a little-known player named Hayley Wickenheiser.

O, and you might have heard of a little-known player named Hayley Wickenheiser.

Arguably one of the best in the WCHL, if not the best.

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