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quote:
Originally posted by iheartbb:
Your young men when they arrive at a campus and at physical check in, the talk is about illegal supplements. What do you tell the player that is not interestd in going down that road.?


Is this a JC or the D1 school because at the D1 they are pretty effective on checking on those things with random checks.
Last edited by Homerun04
Coach should provide the NCAA banned substance list, but it is NOT a comprehensive "product list". It is a partial ingredient list, which is misleading. Some ingredients, when combined with things not on the list, produce a banned substance...so, "buyer beware"!

A healthy, well balanced diet and multi-vitamin is all players need...and it's safe!
Your young men when they arrive at a campus and at physical check in, the talk is about illegal supplements. What do you tell the player that is not interestd in going down that road.?



i'm a little slow, so i don't really understand the question. are the coaches/med staff telling him he should take stuff? are the players just talking about stuff?

if it's illegal why would they talk about it? good for him for not wanting to. but the whole thing just doesn't sound right to me.
I'm missing the point of the question, too. My boys got that talk, and it was all about "don't even go there". #2 said several of the players arrived at the meeting with grocery sacks full of "stuff" that they take to get it checked out. But no way should adults be pushing this stuff on players, if that's what you're inferring with your question.
Tell him to put nothing in his body, other than food, that the team trainer hasn't blessed. Trainers are well-schooled in supplements and can tell your guy what he can add to his diet and what is taboo. Lots of innocent looking stuff at GNC is a no-no.

Our players, at a NCAA D III, are randomly tested all year long.

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