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!

News Xerrigate

taipan

Referee
Messages
22,500
How’s the view up there on that high horse champ?

What high horse are you on about? FMD I've stated all these issues give the game the bogan image, our competitors like to use against us.
You think I'm covering up for the drug issue at the Sharks? I could write a book about dumb acts by players over the years at my club.
 

ACTPanthers

Bench
Messages
4,853
What high horse are you on about? FMD I've stated all these issues give the game the bogan image, our competitors like to use against us.
You think I'm covering up for the drug issue at the Sharks? I could write a book about dumb acts by players over the years at my club.
In a thread about a drug cheat, you deflect and bring up other clubs issues that pale in comparison to drug taking... That's the high horse champ.

Performance enhancing drugs aren't "bogan" anyway... That's a strange take on it... Now if the bloke was punching cones, sure.
 

myrrh ken

First Grade
Messages
9,817
In a thread about a drug cheat, you deflect and bring up other clubs issues that pale in comparison to drug taking... That's the high horse champ.

Performance enhancing drugs aren't "bogan" anyway... That's a strange take on it... Now if the bloke was punching cones, sure.

Stop whinging ffs.

Just get on with the zingers.
 

taipan

Referee
Messages
22,500
In a thread about a drug cheat, you deflect and bring up other clubs issues that pale in comparison to drug taking... That's the high horse champ.

Performance enhancing drugs aren't "bogan" anyway... That's a strange take on it... Now if the bloke was punching cones, sure.
In a thread about a drug cheat, you deflect and bring up other clubs issues that pale in comparison to drug taking... That's the high horse champ.

Performance enhancing drugs aren't "bogan" anyway... That's a strange take on it... Now if the bloke was punching cones, sure.

Yet you responded earlier.
"I'd take any of those over a player getting caught drug cheating... just saying"
I responded "TBH I'd take none of those."Because there are some real serious ones around.

You have an odd interpretation of "high horse" when I"ve not supported Xerri nor have other Shark's supporters( he's cost the Sharks and the game )big time, and nowhere indicated I'm superior to anyone else or pompous nor self righteous-the definition of high horse.

Why because off field incidents of which Xerri's is one (and a major one), bring the game into disrepute.And have experienced comments when an NRL player particularly a Shark's player does something.
Whilst we both agree it drug cheating is not a bogan act ,the hard facts are many in the public do when it comes to rugby league.
He played with fire and he will get burnt.
 

ACTPanthers

Bench
Messages
4,853
For a better sting you could have used Sandor Earl. He was using, and dealing, peps whilst at The Panthers.
Probably the closest comparison to Xerri.
Dealing? That's a stretch... He got done for trafficking because he drove with it from one place to another didn't he?... I honestly don't recall him being charged with dealing anything.

FTR as well, had nothing to do with the Panthers (Xerri had nothing to do with the Sharks either for clarity sake)
 
Messages
15,180
Dealing? That's a stretch... He got done for trafficking because he drove with it from one place to another didn't he?... I honestly don't recall him being charged with dealing anything.

FTR as well, had nothing to do with the Panthers (Xerri had nothing to do with the Sharks either for clarity sake)
Sorry yeah trafficking. And yes like I said the closest comparison to Xerri is Sandor when he was playing for the Panthers.
 

Mr Angry

Not a Referee
Messages
51,816
Here is a question, could I buy and take these 'roids.

I do not play sport, can I buy them?
 
Messages
15,180
He was at the raiders when he was busted not the Panthers
Yes he was but he was busted for what he was doing whilst at the Panthers.
It's pretty easy to find that out with a little bit of Google help. It took me about one minute to find it.

https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/s...n/news-story/15fb4bfa0e24728384314fa9234647b0

James Hooper and Josh Massoud, DailyTelegraph
August 30, 2013 12:00am
THE Penrith Panthers have admitted paying $1160 for Sandor Earl to be injected with supplements in 2011 as the NRL's drugs-in-sport investigation claimed its first major scalp.
But Panthers Group boss Warren Wilson was on Thursday night adamant the club was unaware Earl’s medical bills related to banned peptide CJC-1295 and said the NRL star had gone off-site without Penrith’s consent.

In a watershed day that could blow the Australian Anti-Doping Authority’s seven-month investigation into rugby league wide open, the NRL hit Earl with a provisional suspension relating to the use and trafficking of CJC-1295.

News Corp can reveal that a Sydney doctor with a direct link to sports scientist Stephen Dank injected Earl 12 times during 2011 and billed the Penrith Panthers Group $1160.

Penrith Panthers Group boss Wilson confirmed Earl visited doctor Ijaz Khan’s Injury Care clinic in Cabramatta after suffering a shoulder injury when contracted to the Panthers in 2011.

similars

TEXT MESSAGES EXPOSED EARL


f50bf09c072e17764076e398f3b8bfbf

Sandor Earl during his time at Penrith. Picture: Gregg Porteous
HOW IT WORKS

"When we first heard about it (in June), we looked for invoices under the doctor’s name but couldn’t find any," Wilson said.

"Then we Googled his name and we found the clinic (Injury Care). We found (12) invoices from that clinic for treatment to Sandor Earl, totalling around $1,000.

"They weren’t paid until January 2012 because the club wasn’t in the best financial shape at that time.

"They were also sent to Panthers Group and not the football club. When we found them we forwarded them to the NRL’s Integrity Unit to investigate.

f48dc32e86a61ac3f0f0932055fbfc92

Sandor Earl trains with Penrith in 2011. Picture: Simon Bullard
"We left it in the hands of the NRL. We’ve since conducted a review of our procedures, because there was a player going off-site for treatment without any authorisation from the club.

"That’s a problem, not just for Penrith, that you can’t control players once they’re away from your care.

"We’ve completely changed our procedures as a result and no one is to get any treatment - or pay any invoices - unless it’s authorised by the doctor.

"This player has done something individually wrong and if he’s found guilty of trafficking then I hope they throw the book at him."

Panthers general manager Phil Gould confirmed to News Corp in June that the club had referred the Earl issue to the NRL’s integrity unit.

Dr Khan’s Cabramatta Injury Care Clinic has previously featured in relation to Dank and the Australian Sports Anti-Doping Agency’s drugs-in-sport investigation, with the Cronulla Sharks billed by the clinic for blood tests at the start of 2011.

At the time the blood tests were conducted, Dank was in the process of implementing the supplements program that has landed the Sharks in the crosshairs of the ongoing ASADA investigation.

Crucially, CJC-1295 is one of the peptides the Sharks stand accused of using, according to the independent report compiled by Dr Tricia Kavanagh and detailed by News Corp in May.

Kavanagh’s report led to coach Shane Flanagan being stood down for a fortnight and four staff members being sacked by the club’s previous board, before the new board headed by Damian Keogh opted to overthrow the decisions.

Trainer Mark Noakes, who has since been reinstated against the NRL’s advice, provided a statement naming CJC-1295 and GHRP-6 as the peptides that the Sharks allegedly used.

16eea9fd6b2952afdfc918a4f055841d

Sandor Earl is in doubt for Canberra. Picture: Gregg Porteous
So given Earl has been issued with an infraction notice for the use of CJC-1295, Cronulla’s place in the finals remains a bone of contention among rival NRL clubs.

Dank has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing or giving athletes banned substances.

Earl joined the Panthers at the start of 2011 and spent the majority of his tenure injured or playing NSW Cup for Windsor Wolves.

He then switched clubs to the Canberra Raiders midway through last year and went on to star in the 2012 finals.

The winger, renowned for his combination with Blake Ferguson, started this season strongly before being dropped to NSW Cup and then recently re-emerged in the NRL.

In May, Earl announced he would be leaving the NRL at the end of this season to play French rugby for second division club Pau on a one-year contract worth $220,000.

That contract is now up in the air given that the World Anti-Doping Agency’s code can also be applied in European rugby.
 

Latest posts

Top