Not a bad idea coach Gonzales. Have you been in contact with coach Dahl lately? I know you don't know him that well but you crossed paths occasionally on the NCAA circuit and I haven't heard from him here in a long time.
Not a bad idea coach Gonzales. Have you been in contact with coach Dahl lately? I know you don't know him that well but you crossed paths occasionally on the NCAA circuit and I haven't heard from him here in a long time.
from San Antonio? yes he brought his runners here to ABQ for altitude camp last summer, along with the utep team and the U of Houston team. we were actually all laughing at his team because they could barely handle the altitude here. my team and new mexico highlands and nmsu las cruces did fine.
Alex Hutchinson talked about this in his book endure. They gave bikers fentanyl, and then told them to bike as hard as they could. Since they didn't feel pain, they went out too fast and ended up biking slowly by the end, but the times were similar.
I think that taking a painkiller (especially one that lowers your core temperature) before big races could be helpful at the HS/NCAA level, but pros drug test.
Sounds unethical too. Part of being a good runner is developing the mental toughness to overcome the discomfort when racing. Taking a drug to try to “help” with that seems like a cheap way out. A terrible life lesson to be teaching young people.
Sounds unethical too. Part of being a good runner is developing the mental toughness to overcome the discomfort when racing. Taking a drug to try to “help” with that seems like a cheap way out. A terrible life lesson to be teaching young people.
Alex Hutchinson talked about this in his book endure. They gave bikers fentanyl, and then told them to bike as hard as they could. Since they didn't feel pain, they went out too fast and ended up biking slowly by the end, but the times were similar.
I think that taking a painkiller (especially one that lowers your core temperature) before big races could be helpful at the HS/NCAA level, but pros drug test.
Acetaminophen (aka Tylenol) isn't banned. It's been shown to give a small benefit in endurance sports.
Alex Hutchinson talked about this in his book endure. They gave bikers fentanyl, and then told them to bike as hard as they could. Since they didn't feel pain, they went out too fast and ended up biking slowly by the end, but the times were similar.
I think that taking a painkiller (especially one that lowers your core temperature) before big races could be helpful at the HS/NCAA level, but pros drug test.
Acetaminophen (aka Tylenol) isn't banned. It's been shown to give a small benefit in endurance sports.
i am now giving them all Excedrin before races, because it has both caffeine and acetaminophen in it. this will do 2 things........
help with their excitement and alertness
help their pain while racing
Salazar 2.0 is laughing at you. Not much of a daredevil are you? A lot of the losers take Excedrin. In for a penny, in for a pound I say! Testosterone and meth for everyone, especially the ladies.
This is not remotely ok on a whole variety of levels. Like the level of you should be fired asap so dont do it. Are you really a new AD? That just seems to be the case from the info in ur post hopefully that isn't accurate or i misgoogled. I wasn't going to post but this is actually fairly disturbing. Just so you know a HS coach or adminstrator shouldn't be talking about giving the kids any level of drugs to enhance performance. It's cheating first of all and more importantly like others have said u aren't their doctor if one of them has an allergic reaction wave ur retirement bye bye. There's a reason that stuff isn't(or shouldnt be)in the med kit.
Also if someone registered a name just to screw with this guy you got me good job meh whatever but that is powerfully uncool and lame.
OP feels trollish, but for anyone wondering: acetaminophen has a deleterious effect on the tendon repair/restructuring. Essentially, when acetaminophen is in the system the tendon fibers do not repair/restructure in a way where they are running in parallel with one another. Instead, the tendon structure becomes composed of fibers that are wavier and overall not as elastic due to the fact they don't align with one another.
Start using something for races and that'll lead to hard workouts, then moderately hard workouts, then it's an everyday thing along with selling your body for your new advil habit.
Anyway, if something is legal that's your first clue it ain't gonna do sh!t for performance.
A seemingly innocent gateway to doping. Convince kids that they need to take something to gain an edge and that thought sticks with them as they move along their running journey.