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But when you want to succeed, and you're constantly getting passed up by people who are on a Doctor Approved Steroid Regimen, there's tremendous pressure to get on a Doctor Approved Steroid Regimen yourself. With anabolic steroids being banned for everyone in the WWE (unless they still have a TRT exemption), there's no longer as much pressure to juice up; not that some performers aren't still doing it.So if you want success then you need to be juiced up?
I would be better be unsuccessful on my natural talent rather than being successful with artificial one.
Fuck off with the high horse wrestling fan bullshit. Your neckbeard is showing.
Stone Cold almost certainly was juicing during his time on top, though an awful lot of that was to help recovery from his various injuries.
And sure, being large isn't necessary to be larger than life... but it helps a whole shitload. You're only thinking in terms of wrestling. I'm talking about success on a different level. Daniel Bryan or Dean Ambrose isn't going to be asked to be in any major motion pictures or anything like that.... but The Rock and Batista are.
But when you want to succeed, and you're constantly getting passed up by people who are on a Doctor Approved Steroid Regimen, there's tremendous pressure to get on a Doctor Approved Steroid Regimen yourself. With anabolic steroids being banned for everyone in the WWE (unless they still have a TRT exemption), there's no longer as much pressure to juice up; not that some performers aren't still doing it.
This is the same dude who went on a tear in the kimbo slice thread saying his constant steroid abuse had absolutely zero effect on his heart problem and eventual heart related death, right?
you introduce a professional steroid scheme is managing that to an effective extent. WWE probably have the money to ensure that it happens, but I highly doubt they would consider the positives of that sort of system as outweighing both the costs and the social/media stigma. There's also an issue when it comes to the independent scene - if the WWE change their approach, there's potential to cause an extremely unregulated surge of use in places that simply can't handle it enough to make it safe. You also might end up in a situation where the guys trying to make it to the WWE are pushing themselves beyond all safe limits because they won't have to worry about being tested.
Obviously, any steroid used as a recovery/exercise aid under supervision from professionals is fine, I don't really think anyone would be swayed as far as disagreeing to that extent