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blue bags

First Grade
Messages
9,602
Cronulla's Bronson Xerri is appealing his four-year doping ban but Sandor Earl says Xerri can return to the game even if he loses
By Chloe Hart



Suspended Cronulla Sharks youngster Bronson Xerri faces the NRL Appeals Tribunal before Christmas over his doping ban, but it will be weeks before his fate is decided.

Key points:
  • Cronulla's Bronson Xerri was suspended in May 2020 for allegedly using and possessing anabolic steroids
  • He is appealing a four-year ban — the same penalty former NRL star Sandor Earl received for performance enhancing drugs offences in 2013
  • Earl returned to the NRL with Melbourne in 2018 and says his time away from the game made him determined to play again
The Cronulla club has continued paying his wage but the Sharks, who still bear the scars of their 2014 doping scandal, will be desperate to move on.

The 19-year-old had the world at his feet during his debut 2019 NRL season.

He was the Shark's rising star, finished as the league's 12th-highest try scorer with 13 (from 22 games) including a hat-trick against the Dragons in round 25 and a double the next week.

That dream start came crashing down when he was suspended in May 2020 for allegedly using and possessing anabolic steroids (testosterone, androsterone, etiocholanolone and 5b-androstane-3a,17b-diol).

Xerri is challenging the four-year-ban he is facing.

Melbourne Storm winger Sandor Earl faced the same fate when he was 22 years old while at the Canberra Raiders.

Earl was banned for four years for using and trafficking a performance-enhancing drug in 2013, before returning to the game with the Storm in 2018.

He says the public backlash was the most difficult part.

"That was way harder than the final verdict or the decision to end my career — coming forward and going through that (doping) process — that whole period was a lot harder," the recently-retired Earl said.

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Sandor Earl scored 17 tries in 29 games for the Raiders before he was hit with a four-year ban for use and trafficking of peptides.(AAP: Renee McKay)
Earl, now 31, empathises with Xerri, but is urging others not to go down the same path.

"There's no doubt the pressure on young athletes, you really want to succeed and he (Bronson) was probably in a position where he was trying to be the best athlete he can — coming under injury clouds, that sets you back, it's tough but no athlete should put themselves in that position," he said.

Earl is one of the few to pull off a comeback.

"Rugby league is all-consuming and a lot of sacrifice, it's important to have a good balance, close relationships outside of the football bubble, explore your interests, find something you love," he said.

he was tested after a tip-off and returned positive A and B samples.

"For Bronson it's a tough period in his life, once he gets through this moment he can rip the band-aid [off] and move on with his life and there's no doubt he can make a comeback if he wants," Earl said.

"It comes down to one simple decision — whether you're going to let it consume you or are you going to move on and be positive, sometimes it's easier said than done."

Conversation should be about health — not cheating
Medical experts fear the system is too focused on cheating and the risk of ruining careers — rather than the serious health effects.

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Sport and Exercise physician Dr Larissa Trease warns that there are significant effects for athletes using performance enhancing drugs.(Supplied: Twitter)
"There's really significant immediate and long-term effects from using performance- or image-enhancing drugs, which affect all systems of the body," said Dr Larissa Trease, a medical advisor to Sports Integrity Australia.

"Anabolics and stimulants can result in cardiac effects, diabetes can develop from the use of human growth hormone, liver failure too, EPOs can cause thromboembolic events or strokes.

"In males the testes shrink and cause infertility, substances can cause premature closure of the growth plate so people fail to reach their true height and stature, acne, in women facial hair and the growth of an Adam's apple or swelling in the neck." Dr Trease said.

The mental and psychological consequences can be as severe.

"Anabolic steroids can cause personality changes, like aggression, a loss of control, outbursts of violence, most of the performance- and image-enhancing drugs can also affect people's psychological wellbeing, stimulants can cause anxiety and acute psychotic episodes."

Many substances are sourced under the counter and have never been tested for their long-term effects.

"Some of them, as an example SARMS actually never make it through the testing process because of the significant side-effects including tumours or cancers caused in rats, so they've never actually been licenced for human use."

Sport Integrity Australia is concerned the rise of the body-beautiful gym culture is normalising performance- and image-enhancing drugs.

"There is so much performance improvement to be had through good health, diet, sleep, regular exercise — rather than harming your body — no one ever tested positive for broccoli," Dr Trease said.

Posted 17hhours ago
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-12...-xerri-to-face-nrls-appeals-tribunal/12975156
 

Someguy

First Grade
Messages
7,139
Will be interesting if Xerri can make it in first grade again. Saw him as an extremely strong and fast player but lacking some basic skills. He will have to work on his skills and will come back lacking some speed and strength.

really have to feel for other young players that missed out on a contract or a chance to play first grade because of the advantage he had
 

TIGER14

Bench
Messages
2,604
Will be interesting if Xerri can make it in first grade again. Saw him as an extremely strong and fast player but lacking some basic skills. He will have to work on his skills and will come back lacking some speed and strength.

really have to feel for other young players that missed out on a contract or a chance to play first grade because of the advantage he had

I really doubt he can. He already says he hasn't picked up a football since. Sandor Earl came back but he worked bloody hard to get there. I can't see Xerri having the same discipline.
 

seanoff

Juniors
Messages
1,207
Will be interesting if Xerri can make it in first grade again. Saw him as an extremely strong and fast player but lacking some basic skills. He will have to work on his skills and will come back lacking some speed and strength.

really have to feel for other young players that missed out on a contract or a chance to play first grade because of the advantage he had

yeah he was extremely strong, but is anywhere near strong enough without being on the gear.
 

Mark B

Juniors
Messages
532
The kid has an enormous amount of talent. Shame to see he has obviously received crap advice and then followed said advice I don’t think his career is done, still only a young man and hopefully comes back to NRL level once his suspension is finished.
 

seanoff

Juniors
Messages
1,207
he was on epo ?

that is an authority script eg you can’t just get it from your GP
You don’t think pro cycling teams have doctors. Also you can get epo pretty easily if you know where. Same as every other ped
Then there is stuff like clear etc etc he was on pretty much everything you can imagine.
 

Mark B

Juniors
Messages
532
You don’t think pro cycling teams have doctors. Also you can get epo pretty easily if you know where. Same as every other ped
Then there is stuff like clear etc etc he was on pretty much everything you can imagine.
Always thought it was a steroid type drug to help him recover from surgery. EPO just increases your aerobic ability by miles, hence why it was so popular in cycling, especially going up those massive climbs.

Saw a documentary a while ago where cheating in races such as theTour de France started with the riders making quick pit stops at taverns and filling their pockets with long necks of beer which helped control the pain. Not sure how long the practice lasted. Imagine going down some of those mountain sides half cut.
 

seanoff

Juniors
Messages
1,207
Always thought it was a steroid type drug to help him recover from surgery. EPO just increases your aerobic ability by miles, hence why it was so popular in cycling, especially going up those massive climbs.

Saw a documentary a while ago where cheating in races such as theTour de France started with the riders making quick pit stops at taverns and filling their pockets with long necks of beer which helped control the pain. Not sure how long the practice lasted. Imagine going down some of those mountain sides half cut.
Probably being half cut was an advantage. Those descents are genuinely scary. And 100km-hr on a bike is frightening
 

AJB1102

First Grade
Messages
6,339
Saw a documentary a while ago where cheating in races such as theTour de France started with the riders making quick pit stops at taverns and filling their pockets with long necks of beer which helped control the pain. Not sure how long the practice lasted. Imagine going down some of those mountain sides half cut.

f**k the crashes would've been awesome! Still the only part of cycling worth watching.
 

blue bags

First Grade
Messages
9,602
Xerri bomb: Banned NRL star eyes NFL switch
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By Danny Weidler
April 4, 2021 — 5.30am

Suspended NRL player Bronson Xerri has set himself a new sporting challenge while he serves out his four-year doping ban: he wants to try and make it in the NFL.

Xerri has taken small steps towards that goal, touching base with at least one player agent with connections in the sport. Pacific Sports Management – the company that set another former Sharks star, Valentine Holmes, on his way to the US to try his hand at American football – will need to play a key role in his attempt to make it. The boss of that company, Chris Orr, is aware of Xerri’s desire to try to make it in the US.

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Bronson Xerri tested positive to testosterone in November 2019.CREDIT:NRL PHOTOS

Xerri was banned for four years by the NRL’s Anti-Doping Tribunal on March 23 after he tested positive to testosterone in November 2019. His ban covers sports that are signatories to the World Anti-Doping Authority, but the NFL is not bound by the WADA code, meaning Xerri is free to try his hand at American football.

His speed and bulk give him a hope of making it in the big time, but he knows the huge amount of work that would be in front of him. The obvious hurdles are that he is a complete novice at the sport and that his attempt comes at a time when international travel is particularly difficult.

However, unlike Holmes (who spent several months on the New York Jets’ practice squad in 2019 and played in three pre-season games before being released) or Jarryd Hayne (who played eight games for the San Francisco 49ers in 2015 before quitting the sport in May 2016) Xerri has at least three years to make the switch.

In recent times Xerri has been filmed boxing – fuelling speculation he may try that sport – and until recently he has been training with sprint guru Roger Fabri.

image.jpg



Bronson Xerri breaks his silence following his suspension

Bronson Xerri speaks on his mental health following his suspension over a positive doping test.

The challenge of going to the US as a 20-year-old, on his own and taking on athletes from all over the globe, would be significant.

Xerri has been quiet on social media since his last post on March 23, when he apologised for taking the banned substance. He wrote somewhat mysteriously: “The comeback is on, 2024. MIA until I got news for my real fans.”Xerri has talked about his NFL ambition with his advisors and lawyers who say he has no legal issues when it comes to giving it a go. There is no question he has the physical prowess to challenge for a start; it will come down to how much he wants to do it.


https://www.smh.com.au/sport/nrl/xerri-bomb-banned-nrl-star-eyes-nfl-switch-20210403-p57gc1.html
 

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