Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Vitor Belfort Says TRT Doesn't Gain Fights; I Say It Sure Does not Hurt

Testosterone replacement therapy. It is the bane of the mixed martial arts world. Some people, like myself, believe it is nothing more than legalized cheating. Players who've ruined their bodies with steroid use in the past are able to report only a little piece of paper from athletic profits throughout the Usa, and that piece of paper allows them to reverse the results of these past attempts to cheat. Rather than paying a fee for using steroids and managing the results of their activities, they are given a free of charge pass that allows them to compete keenly against anything has never been never once injected by other fighters who to their bodies. Older fighters are able to turn back the clock. As opposed to going right on through the natural aging process, they are given permission to inject themselves with an element that primarily keeps them young, at least in athletic terms. Their health do not feel the drop that accompany age. Instead, they pump themselves packed with a compound right from the elixir of youth, one that allows them to teach just as harda'if not harder, in some casesa'than they did a decade ago. Dana White applied to beAambivalent about TRT, back in the days before it became an epidemic. Today? WhiteAhates it therefore much he is instituted random drug testing for almost any UFC fighter who scores a TRT exemption. If you are a fighter and you get both hands on a exemption, White says he is planning to ensure that you're playing by the rules, that you're not overloading the body with testosterone and then scaling it when it is time for a drug test. TRT and the people who utilize it are usually in the news headlines. It remains a hot-button issue that won't disappear completely. And that is because with every passing UFC occasion, we are obtaining more and more fighters who have an exemption. At first, it absolutely was Chael Sonnen and Todd Duffee. Now? Forrest Griffin, Joe Mir and Vitor Belfort have exemptions. Because they do not have to reveal, and those are simply the people we know about; we do not know if exemptions have been granted by the UFC for fighters who participate in the cards that the marketing regulates. Belfort and his TRT exemption are back in the headlines when he is fighting Luke Rockhold next weekend, and Rockhold does not like TRT. Have a look at Rockhold's remarks to MMAFightCorner.com: And most of all, I obtained more heart than Vitor. I believe Iam more of a person than Vitor.... Iam enthusiastic about [his testosterone replacement therapy, TRT]. It really fuels me even more. It just motivates me to train and it just sets a little chip on my shoulder. Belfort addressed Rockhold's comments during an on Monday's version of The MMA Hour with Ariel Helwani: "Why don't they talk about people that are on TRT and drop in the very first round? TRT doesn't get fights. Seem at Chael Sonnen, he's on TRT and he's lost battles in the first, second round. That will not gain fights, you've to have skills." Belfort features a point. Fights does not be won by trt all by itself. You could send me full of natural testosterone for half a year straight, and I'd still consider myself lucky to get in the cage and last more than 15 seconds with any fighter on the UFC lineup. But whether or not TRT wins battles as a standalone product isn't the problem here. By the time battle evening comes around, any fighter with a TRT exemption must have his T:E (testosterone to epitestosterone) percentage within the normal range specified by the athletic fee. Which can be to say that when a TRT-enabled fighter measures in the cage, he is got exactly the same quantity of testosterone in his program as his non-using opponent. But that is perhaps not the issue, can it be? The real problem I've with TRT is that it provides rewards to an athlete all through his training camp. It's magic drug for fighters who're tired or banged up, and I believe while suffering an intense eight-to-10-week training camp most fighters might drop in that category. Suppose that you're a fighter, and you have experienced five or six days of hard training. You're exhausted, and rightly so. You need certainly to take some time off, but you do not wish to miss your morning wrestling procedure or your fighting rounds at night. With TRT, you do not need certainly to miss anything; you just continue your regimen of government-sanctioned testosterone, and the human body magically heals itself in no time flat. You sense younger and stronger, and you are in a position to teach longer than you ever did before you started taking the material. Forget lacking sessions; if any such thing, you're putting more workouts than you did before. And all of this is happening while your opponenta'who doesn't get testosterone because he often believes in a clean sport or he does not qualifya'is tedious and getting days off because his body can not handle the strain. TRT gives the advantage to you of to be able to train longer and press harder if you weren't on the material than you actually could. And that's the issue here. I really do not believe that TRT offers everyone superpowers once they step in the cage; we have seen competitors on TRT (Chael Sonnen and Frank Mir) drop in the last month. A TRT-enabled fighter is not likely to go in the cage and exhibit some sort of super-human strength. Because of the power he is given by TRT he's perhaps not planning to kill anyone. However it certainly does give an advantage to practitioners during training camp. That is the root of the issue I have: that it generates an unequal playing field. You then shouldn't have the ability to, either, if your opponent isn't using TRT. I do not care if the federal government says it's okay or that you think it's what you need certainly to survive. If your body requires testosterone to compete in fight sportsa'and I really do not care if it is because you're old or because you damaged your body by using steroids in the past or because you just want to use the stuffa'you probably should not be competing in the initial place. Anything else is cheating.

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