80-year-old weightlifter busted for doping

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80-year-old weightlifter busted for doping - ESPN

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. -- The latest target on the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency's list: an 80-year-old weightlifter who was busted for steroids.

The agency that brought down Lance Armstrong announced a two-year suspension for Don Ramos of Colorado Springs, Colo., who tested positive for steroids while attempting to set a world record in his age group at the Pan American Masters Weightlifting Championships in June.

USADA was contracted to test at the event for athletes 35 and older. The suspension means Ramos can't compete again until July 2015.

Organizers of masters events have been cracking down on doping. Two years ago, USADA suspended nine masters athletes for positive tests, including one in his 50s and three in their 60s.
 
speaking of older bodybuilders and power lifters, I met this couple, about 5 years ago, they did bodybuilding when they where younger, also power lifting, and they won competition's... but when I met them they were preparing for there next comp at 60 ( something) and 70 (something ).. and the lady was squatting 405 like it nothing... and the man was benching 275 like that was part of his warm up.... I sat and talked with them for a few hours getting tips and really any knowledge I can get from them, I have never been one to take advise from just anybody, except older people they know there shit and there advise is some of the best you can get not because they know it all, because we all know advice is a reflection of you and what you have done and more so depending what you are seeking, but for the most part they have more logic and facts to back up there advice compared to say someone who is say ten to fit teen years older than you compared to 20,40, plus years...
 
The problem is that most bb competitors and even regular trainees w/ not much experience are advice proof. I was helping one guy, who had won a NPC Nat qualifier, prep for nationals. At 14 weeks out he was at 500 mgs of test, and I convinced him to bump that up to 1200, and then add 800 mgs of Mast an Tren respectively. He was dieting harder than I advised, but was still a potential winner at 11 days out.

He knew to cut training back and stop leg training 14 days out. The plan was to slowly carb him up/fill him out over 10 days and run the diuretic program. Suddenly, he said he was not going to use diuretics because people have died from them. I told him yes, people have died, because they keep pushing the envelope: The Germans start 30 days out. The program I use (and the So Cal pros use) was totally scientific and compounds were titrated up over 11 days.

I was supposed to monitor him, but he said he was emailing someone his pics. That is stupid, but he was set. He then decided that he was going to deplete and load. He was already way over dieted, and then depleted for 4 days and carbed up for 3 days. 3 days was no where near enough. He came in totally flat and placed 12th.

We have a member of this board who has sever muscle imbalances, and yet ran a big cycle w/ tren. He does not even know how to train properly and is jumping on gear instead. I laid out a program to help him, but he refused. His muscle imbalances are worse than ever.




speaking of older bodybuilders and power lifters, I met this couple, about 5 years ago, they did bodybuilding when they where younger, also power lifting, and they won competition's... but when I met them they were preparing for there next comp at 60 ( something) and 70 (something ).. and the lady was squatting 405 like it nothing... and the man was benching 275 like that was part of his warm up.... I sat and talked with them for a few hours getting tips and really any knowledge I can get from them, I have never been one to take advise from just anybody, except older people they know there shit and there advise is some of the best you can get not because they know it all, because we all know advice is a reflection of you and what you have done and more so depending what you are seeking, but for the most part they have more logic and facts to back up there advice compared to say someone who is say ten to fit teen years older than you compared to 20,40, plus years...
 
@ pericles: yeah some people don't understand the help of out side views it is very helpful... could of got scared maybe from poor judgment on his part from the last person he took advise from and that could of made him so hesitant..... they are living proof and others to come who follow in that choice of life style that lifting weights is beneficial even in old age....
 
@ pericles: yeah some people don't understand the help of out side views it is very helpful... could of got scared maybe from poor judgment on his part from the last person he took advise from and that could of made him so hesitant..... they are living proof and others to come who follow in that choice of life style that lifting weights is beneficial even in old age....

For my last show an IFBB pro helped me. I did exactly as he advised to the letter and came in 100%. He had me eating way more, doing way more cardio (2 hours a day) and more gear (2.5k a week, which I thought was insane at that time). I followed the diuretics formula exactly as he advised.
 
hell yeah!!!! from your pic your in really good shape you look defiantly comp ready, I bought Arnold Schwarzenegger new and old bodybuilding encyclopedia and I love that book its what helped me form my work out for what it today... also any good knowledge in and out side the gym as well...
 
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/16/s...ut-he-has-a-story.html?hp&_r=0&pagewanted=all

A little over two weeks ago, though, Ramos was declared a cheat, the oldest steroid doper ever caught by the United States Anti-Doping Agency.

He does not deny that he took synthetic testosterone, a banned substance. He has been taking it for 20 years, he said, with a prescription from a doctor — a practice common among aging men, even those with no competitive ambitions, to combat naturally falling levels of the hormone.

But after a recent competition in Chicago, Ramos’s testosterone level was found to be extraordinarily high, more than twice the typical reading for someone his age. He was suspended from competition for two years and did not appeal the ruling.

“Do I consider myself a cheater?” Ramos said, mulling the question. “I never thought of myself that way. I feel like I’m just keeping myself healthy.”

Ramos’s life is a Forrest Gumpian odyssey, most of it verifiable. His claim about being a well-known dance instructor in New York City leads to his quotations in a New York Times article from 1971 on the latest crazes. A mention of his stumble into modeling leads to a full-page magazine advertisement for Playboy, with a 30-year-old Ramos relaxing next to a beautiful woman in the mid-1960s. (“What sort of man reads Playboy?” the copy begins. “A guy who enjoys life thickly carpeted.”)

Ramos enjoyed life, all right, through six marriages, fortunes and bankruptcies, and, after he turned 70, a pile of world records for weight lifting.

He can run and jump. (He wants to set high-jump records for his age but cannot figure out where to practice.) His face barely sags. His hair, in the mold of Joe Biden’s, is thin, white and combed straight back. He has no hearing aid and, thanks to eye surgery, no glasses. His resonant voice could do voice-overs.

His mind is quick. He drives fast. He covets younger women; his last serious girlfriend, when he was 66, was 33. Spend a day with him, and you could be convinced if someone said he was 58.

But all that, and all those stories, is overshadowed by what happened in June in Chicago, at the Pan American Masters Weightlifting Championships.

For his weight class, Ramos nearly broke the 80-and-over record of about 133 pounds in the snatch, in which competitors lift the bar overhead from the floor in a single motion. It might have been a surprise that he did not set a record: Ramos still holds world records for the snatch in three weight categories in the 75-79 age group. He snatched 172 pounds in 2008.

But in the clean and jerk, in which the bar is raised first to the shoulders and then overhead, Ramos broke the record by lifting about 161 pounds.

Ramos was immediately escorted to drug testing. It is done at international events, sparingly, mostly to authenticate records and weed out the occasional steroid suspects. Organizers are often ambivalent about drug testing; it legitimizes the event, but at some cost. The director of the Pan American event, Corinne Grotenhuis, paid $6,000 for Usada’s oversight, she said.

Ramos was watched closely as he urinated into a container and sealed it. He had been through the procedure many times and worried little about the results. He accepted his medal and a Grand Master award, for the best weight lifter among the 200-plus competitors. There was no prize money. There rarely is.

Then Ramos went home, alone, to his dog.

About a month later, he received a notice from Usada: he had failed the drug test. An out-of-balance ratio of testosterone to epitestosterone, a related hormone in the body, gave him away.

Ramos’s doctor ordered a blood test. His testosterone level on July 29 was 1,121 nanograms per deciliter — more than twice what it should have been. Ramos stopped the injections.

A month later, a follow-up blood test found his testosterone level to be extraordinarily low, signaling a range of potential problems, affecting anything from the prostate to the pituitary glands.
 

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ESPN to broadcast feature segment on Don Ramos in November 2013:

Don Ramos, a long-time Colorado Springs resident, is the oldest athlete ever sanctioned by the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency. He was busted this summer for steroid use. He’s 80.

Ramos said Tuesday an ESPN reporter and film crew have visited him in Colorado Springs, filmed him working out and talked to him about his life story. Ramos said ESPN officials have told him the network plans to broadcast a feature about him in November.

Source: David Ramsey / Ramos, the 80-year-old busted for doping, says ESPN will soon tell his story
 
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