What pitcher recently admitted to using the drugs amphetamines and androstenedione?
Staff report Cincinnati Reds pitcher Bronson Arroyo has admitted to using both androstenedione and amphetamines while playing for the Boston Red Sox, according to a story posted on bostonherald.com. Arroyo told the Boston Herald that he stopped using both drugs before they were banned by baseball. Major League Baseball banned androstenedione in 2004 and amphetamines in 2006. “Before 2004, none of us paid any attention to anything we took,” Arroyo told the Herald during a phone interview. “Now they don’t want us to take anything unless it’s approved. But back then, who knows what was in stuff? The FDA wasn’t regulating stuff, not unless it was killing people or people were dying from it.” Arroyo told the Herald he stopped using andro was because he heard through the grapevine that, because of lax production standards, some andro was laced with known steroids, such as Winstrol. (Ref URL
Staff report Cincinnati Reds pitcher Bronson Arroyo has admitted to using both androstenedione and amphetamines while playing for the Boston Red Sox, according to a story posted on bostonherald.com. Arroyo told the Boston Herald that he stopped using both drugs before they were banned by baseball. Major League Baseball banned androstenedione in 2004 and amphetamines in 2006. “Before 2004, none of us paid any attention to anything we took,” Arroyo told the Herald during a phone interview. “Now they don’t want us to take anything unless it’s approved. But back then, who knows what was in stuff? The FDA wasn’t regulating stuff, not unless it was killing people or people were dying from it.” Arroyo told the Herald he stopped using andro was because he heard through the grapevine that, because of lax production standards, some andro was laced with known steroids, such as Winstrol.
Cincinnati Reds pitcher Bronson Arroyo has admitted to using both androstenedione and amphetamines while playing for the Boston Red Sox, according to a story posted on bostonherald.com. Arroyo told the Boston Herald that he stopped using both drugs before they were banned by baseball. Major League Baseball banned androstenedione in 2004 and amphetamines in 2006. “Before 2004, none of us paid any attention to anything we took,” Arroyo told the Herald during a phone interview. “Now they don’t want us to take anything unless it’s approved. But back then, who knows what was in stuff?
Arroyo told the Boston Herald that he stopped using both drugs before they were banned by baseball. Major League Baseball banned androstenedione in 2004 and amphetamines in 2006. “Before 2004, none of us paid any attention to anything we took,” Arroyo told the Herald during a phone interview. “Now they don’t want us to take anything unless it’s approved. But back then, who knows what was in stuff? The FDA wasn’t regulating stuff, not unless it was killing people or people were dying from it.” Arroyo told the Herald he stopped using andro was because he heard through the grapevine that, because of lax production standards, some andro was laced with known steroids, such as Winstrol.