What's new
The Front Row Forums

Register a free account today to become a member of the world's largest Rugby League discussion forum! Once signed in, you'll be able to participate on this site by adding your own topics and posts, as well as connect with other members through your own private inbox!

Organised crime and drugs in sport investigation part III

Status
Not open for further replies.
Messages
21,880
Lol you really shouldn't believe everything you read on here! considering their current funding is less than $15 mill a year I very, very, very much doubt it is being increased by 1.7 bill unless that is over the next 100 years!

I see they have just announced they are going to spend $1.5 bill buying some aeroplanes, now that is a fricking disgrace when there is a $12billion hole in the budget.

http://www.smh.com.au/sport/funding-increased-to-bolster-integrity-20130503-2iyf2.html

FFS , I'm sure it was a typo.
 

CrazyTiger

Juniors
Messages
1,835
Meanwhile the government has just announced 1.7 billion dollars in extra funding for asada

No word yet on the extra they will spend on cancer research

Too little too late for Cronulla. However this is a huge boon for rugby league and all sports in Australia. Hopefully we can stop the NRL turn into the farce that cycling was for more than ten years.
 

Griffoshark66

First Grade
Messages
6,301
Too little too late for Cronulla. However this is a huge boon for rugby league and all sports in Australia. Hopefully we can stop the NRL turn into the farce that cycling was for more than ten years.

Tiger have you considered going somewhere to die? It's not a bad idea considering you're a twat.
 
Messages
21,880
Meanwhile , the drunk driver is at it again ......



Rebecca Wilson: Cronulla story will be told
Rebecca Wilson
The Daily Telegraph
May 04, 2013 12:00AM

Increase Text Size
Decrease Text Size
Print
SHAREFacebookTwitterEmail

Artwork: Scott "Boo" Bailey Source: The Daily Telegraph

THE Cronulla Sharks successful application for an injunction preventing publication of legal advice containing a chronology from Dr Trish Kavanagh, who was retained to report to the club, will be a bit part in the Grand theatre of the ASADA investigations.

While one journalist from a rival newspaper encouraged Cronulla players not to answer questions during interviews with ASADA, the drug agency is using every weapon at its disposal to ensure that those interviewed tell all.

ASADA is in possession of information about the conduct of various clubs which will eventually surface once interviews have been conducted and submissions have been received. The current interviews are a necessary process in determining whether any particular club has breached.

Cronulla are in disarray. While the AFL conducts its own inquiry into the Essendon allegations and allows ASADA the right to conduct its investigation in an apparently transparent environment, Cronulla appears determined to use the legal process to stop any lay judgment being made of the club ahead of ASADA's official findings.

Wade Graham's appearance at the first ASADA interview should have sounded alarm bells to anyone who cares about the sport. His attire gave the impression of apparent disrespect for the process: no suit, no tie, but cargo pants and thongs. The hat on back to front capped off the look.

The interview was cut short by because Graham was advised not to provide information on teammates in return for a reduced suspension, you guessed it, another lawyer. He will act for every Cronulla player so the chances of the process running quickly are unlikely.

This week has seen the cheer leaders for players' rights come screaming out of the woodwork. For these media commentators, protecting players' rights has become far more important than anything else. While natural justice must apply to every single Australian, that is not an excuse to urge people not to tell the truth. The ACC sounded the alarm in February for a very good reason.

Rugby league and the AFL are Australia's two leading football codes. It might be stating the obvious but these sports are followed by millions of trusting fans, supported by big business and funded by governments. They are accountable to their stakeholders and must be transparent in their machinations when things go wrong.

Sports scientist Stephen Dank admitted for the first time he had provided Jon Mannah with banned peptides. He claims he has a WADA email giving him the green light to use such substances and received permission from an oncologist to give the substances to Mannah. The email is yet to be produced but Dank says he will come up with it "in court". WADA claims no such email was sent and Dank is not due to appear in court.

At the very least, it is time Mr Dank released the email and any other correspondence he claims to have received from WADA or ASADA. Frankly those emails are the very least he should produce.

Dank is suing this newspaper and various other media organisations.

He continues to leak selectively to various media outlets who are happy to publish without querying the veracity of his information.

This story has a lot more telling in it. It might take a week, a month, or a year. But it will be told.

http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/sport/nrl/cronulla-story-will-be-told/story-e6frexnr-1226635006210

:crazy:


Yeah , if transparent means undermining.
 

CrazyTiger

Juniors
Messages
1,835

El Diablo

Post Whore
Messages
94,107
lol

you're an idiot

ASADA just want players to confess regardless if they're not guilty because ASADA have diddly

ASADA can get f**ked
 

CrazyTiger

Juniors
Messages
1,835
lol

you're an idiot

ASADA just want players to confess regardless if they're not guilty because ASADA have diddly

ASADA can get f**ked

The NRL just want a clean bill of health from ASADA. ASADA is there to keep performance enhancing drugs out of the game.

Bucking ASADA makes the NRL appear to be condoning drugs in sport.
 

CrazyTiger

Juniors
Messages
1,835
i think the only one on drugs is you

you need tasering

Think of it this way. At present, the NRL and the AFL stand accused of being drug riddled. If the AFL cooperates with ASADA and the NRL does not, then the NRL will appear to the man on the street as a druggie sport while the AFL appears as a clean skin.

Do you want the AFL to look clean and the NRL to look like a drug addled sport? This will provide a huge advantage to the AFL.
 
Messages
21,880
I'm no fan or bourbon bed, but she is right in this instance. Cronulla is in disarray.

Players refusing to cooperate with ASADA makes the whole game look amateurish and corrupt. It is a disaster for the NRL and Cronulla.

What utter rubbish.

The players dont owe anything to the Nrl or the sharks.

In an investigation you look after yourself, appearances come dead last.
 
Messages
21,880
Think of it this way. At present, the NRL and the AFL stand accused of being drug riddled. If the AFL cooperates with ASADA and the NRL does not, then the NRL will appear to the man on the street as a druggie sport while the AFL appears as a clean skin.

Do you want the AFL to look clean and the NRL to look like a drug addled sport? This will provide a huge advantage to the AFL.

Thats right , lets throw players to the wolves and do away with their rights just because we might look bad.

Get a spine and stand up for whats right. You're as weak as p*ss
 

CrazyTiger

Juniors
Messages
1,835
What utter rubbish.

The players dont owe anything to the Nrl or the sharks.
No they don't. The players have very different goals to the clubs or the NRL. This is what I am pointing out.

In an investigation you look after yourself, appearances come dead last.
Players should look after themselves. The NRL should look after itself as well. Appearances matter to the NRL.
 

CrazyTiger

Juniors
Messages
1,835
Thats right , lets throw players to the wolves and do away with their rights just because we might look bad.

Get a spine and stand up for whats right. You're as weak as p*ss

I think they should be cooperative. I want a level playing field. That is what I think is right.
 
Messages
21,880
No they don't. The players have very different goals to the clubs or the NRL. This is what I am pointing out.


Players should look after themselves. The NRL should look after itself as well. Appearances matter to the NRL.

And the NRL can't and shouldn't do away with players rights just to keep up appearances.

Some things are more important.
 

CrazyTiger

Juniors
Messages
1,835
And the NRL can't and shouldn't do away with players rights just to keep up appearances.

Some things are more important.

Ideally I would agree with you. However, drugs are undetectable these days. There is a choice, invade a players privacy or end up with drug riddled sport.

It is one or the other.
 
Messages
21,880
I think they should be cooperative. I want a level playing field. That is what I think is right.


Perhaps we should force those who have been arrested by the police to cooperate as well?

The rights of the individual trump those of the state. Its the basis of having a fair legal system.

These investigations should be conducted the same way.Careers are at stake.
 
Messages
21,880
Ideally I would agree with you. However, drugs are undetectable these days. There is a choice, invade a players privacy or end up with drug riddled sport.

It is one or the other.

if thats the only choice , give me drug riddled sport.

Civil liberties and privacy are to important to mess with.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Latest posts

Top