wrbsuperman
Registered
- Joined
- Dec 3, 2013
- Messages
- 134
- Reaction score
- 8
- Points
- 18
"Bones" Jones test to epitest ratios are pretty skewed, want to hear your thoughts
Read an article on yahoo sports mma, drug tests showed Jones to have abnormally low testosterone-to-epitestosterone ratios. He's a 27 year old athlete in his prime, yet
"Jones' ratio in the three tests were 0.29:1, 0.35:1 and 0.19.1. The normal ratio for an African-American male is 1.3:1. For Caucasian and Hispanic men, it is about 1:1 and for an Asian, it is about 0.7:1…. The average amount of testosterone in a male is 61.3 ng/ML per a groundbreaking 1967 study in Clinical Chemistry. In the three tests given to Jones, he had testosterone levels of 1.8 ng/mL, 0.59 ng/mL and 4.9 ng/mL."
Is there honestly any way these results would've happened, in his condition at his athletic prime/superiority, without the use of steroids?
Read an article on yahoo sports mma, drug tests showed Jones to have abnormally low testosterone-to-epitestosterone ratios. He's a 27 year old athlete in his prime, yet
"Jones' ratio in the three tests were 0.29:1, 0.35:1 and 0.19.1. The normal ratio for an African-American male is 1.3:1. For Caucasian and Hispanic men, it is about 1:1 and for an Asian, it is about 0.7:1…. The average amount of testosterone in a male is 61.3 ng/ML per a groundbreaking 1967 study in Clinical Chemistry. In the three tests given to Jones, he had testosterone levels of 1.8 ng/mL, 0.59 ng/mL and 4.9 ng/mL."
Is there honestly any way these results would've happened, in his condition at his athletic prime/superiority, without the use of steroids?