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    NFL suspends six players for doping violations

    http://msn.foxsports.com/nfl/story/8...ing-violations

    NEW YORK (AP) - Six players, including the heart of the Minnesota Vikings' stout defensive line, were suspended for four games without pay by the NFL on Tuesday for violating the league's anti-doping policy.

    All six were punished for using a diuretic, which can serve as a masking agent for steroids.

    The suspended players were running back Deuce McAllister and defensive linemen Charles Grant and Will Smith of New Orleans; defensive linemen Kevin Williams and Pat Williams of Minnesota; and long snapper Bryan Pittman of Houston.

    The punishment means all six will miss the end of the regular season, an especially harsh blow to Minnesota, which relies heavily on the Williamses in its run defense, which ranks second in the league.

    Angelo Wright, the agent for Pat Williams, said he planned to file a motion in federal court in the next 24 hours, presumably to put off his client's suspension.

    A seventh player, Atlanta's Grady Jackson, was not suspended. NFL spokesman Greg Aiello said Jeff Pash, the league's chief counsel, had asked for additional information from Jackson.

    If a player's team makes the playoffs, the player will be eligible to return to the active roster on Dec. 29.

    The suspension of Pat and Kevin Williams, who are not related, may prove to be the most critical.


    The Vikings lead Chicago by a game in the NFC North with four games left, in large part because the Williamses are considered the NFL's best defensive tackle combination.

    Last Sunday, they led a goal-line stand that kept Chicago from taking a 14-3 second-quarter lead in Minneapolis. On the first play after the Bears were stopped, the Vikings' Gus Frerotte threw a 99-yard touchdown pass to Bernard Berrian, giving Minnesota a 10-7 lead it never lost, a 14-point swing.

    "In response to this afternoon's ruling, the Minnesota Vikings are very disappointed in the National Football League's suspension of Kevin and Pat Williams," the team said in a statement. "At the appropriate time, we will have further comment."

    Adolpho Birch, the NFL's vice president of law and labor policy, would not disclose during a conference call when the players tested positive.

    Word of the positive test first leaked in late October. Asked why it took until the final four games of the regular season to hand down the suspensions, Birch said it was "a function of a lot of factors."

    "I think if you ask most coaches, every game is important. I don't think they'd differentiate between the first and the last," Birch said. "We do have things in place to get them done as quickly as possible. But we had to deal with the number of players involved and adjust travel schedules. We have to fit it around the players' ability to attend."




    "Deuce, Will, and Charles did not try to enhance their performance with steroids, nor did they knowingly expose themselves to the adverse health risks of a diuretic," Cornwell said in an e-mail. "They took a weight loss supplement that they had every reason to believe was safe."

    In their appeals, some players said the banned substance Bumetanide was not listed as an ingredient in StarCaps, an over-the-counter weight-loss pill.

    In fact, Jackson filed suit against StarCaps in Alameda County Superior Court in California last month, seeking restitution for any lost salary and damages for "false advertising and unfair business practices."

    But in issuing the suspensions, the league reiterated the section of its policy that reads:

    "You and you alone are responsible for what goes into your body. Claiming that you used only legally available nutritional supplements will not help you in an appeal. ... Even if they are bought over-the-counter from a known establishment, there is currently no way to be sure that they contain the ingredients listed on the packaging or have not been tainted with prohibited substances ...

    "If you take these products, you do so AT YOUR OWN RISK! For your own health and success in the league, we strongly encourage you to avoid the use of supplements altogether, or at the very least to be extremely careful about what you choose to take."

    The NFL also said it sent two notifications about StarCaps on Dec. 19, 2006 — one to NFL club presidents, general managers and head athletic trainers and the second to NFLPA executive Stacy Robinson, who oversees the steroid policy for the union. That letter, according to the league, advised that StarCaps had been added to the list of prohibited dietary supplement companies.

    Asked if the NFL would review its policy on diuretics, Birch said the policy is reviewed every year.

    "I suspect the players association may want to look specifically at diuretics or some other issues. We'd be happy to do that with them if appropriate," he said. "I do think it's good policy. It works well. It has different aspects to it, but we will certainly listen with an open mind and if it's appropriate to make change, make changes."

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    Vikings are done. If you got any FF RBs for Detroit, Arizona, Atlanta or the Giants.. good idea to start them in the upcoming weeks
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    Lawyer: Suspended Vikings to sue NFL

    The NFL announced that Vikings Pat Williams and Kevin Williams were among six players suspended four games each without pay, effective immediately, for violating "a longstanding provision of the policy relating to the use of diuretics and water pills, which serve as masking agents for steroids and are potentially dangerous to the health of players." The players were not available for comment Tuesday, and the Vikings issued a statement that said they are "very disappointed" in the league's decision. An attorney representing the Williamses said Tuesday night that he will file legal action on their behalf today. "The players will take proactive steps to correct a harm suffered as a result of actions by the league and its arbitrary and inequitable administration of the program," said Peter Ginsberg, a New York-based partner at Crowell and Moring, an international law firm. "Neither Pat nor Kevin has ever used steroids and do not warrant this kind of treatment." Ginsberg made clear that he is taking aim at NFL officials, who withheld "important knowledge that not only compromised the players in terms of the program but also jeopardized their health and safety."

    St. Paul Pioneer Press

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    aww man, poor Vikings Just when everything seemed to work out well :-P

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    Federal judge blocks NFL from suspending five players

    Federal judge blocks NFL from suspending five players

    Associated Press

    ST. PAUL, Minn. -- A federal judge has blocked the NFL from suspending five players for violating the league's anti-doping policy.

    U.S. District Judge Paul Magnuson said Friday he needed more time to consider the case after hearing several hours of arguments from the league and the NFL Players Association.

    Kevin Williams and Pat Williams of the Minnesota Vikings, and Charles Grant, Deuce McAllister and Will Smith of the New Orleans Saints all were suspended this week for four games. They tested positive for a banned diuretic in the dietary supplement StarCaps.

    The union has argued the NFL didn't properly inform players about the substance. The NFL's attorneys argued that claim, and others, had been considered and rejected in a process set out by the league's collective bargaining agreement.

    Copyright 2008 by The Associated Press
    However much you think you know about football, rest assured that Skip Bayless knows more!

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