Random Testing
Brian Cushing denied to me at Pro Day last year that he took steroids. He also denied it after the Houston Texans drafted him last year. The NCAA randomly tests college athletes. The most wide-known case involving a USC football player was Brandon Ting, who was suspended for a year but quit the team when it meant his eligibility would be exhausted.
That doesn't mean others did not use steroids if they avoided the random tests.



I got this one, Charlie.
sweet scoopin' Wolfman!!!!
keep ooooooon scooopin!!!!!!
AUUUUUU-WOOOOOOOO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Why do I get the feeling a picture of the Tings without any pants is on the horizon?
If you read his statement, he also denied it now. He said that he tested positive for a non-steroidal substance that was on the NFL banned list. He took a banned substance, so he gets lumped into the "cheater" pile, but he very well could have never taken steroids and never lied to you or the Texans. I'm by no means trying to defend Cushing for coming up dirty, I just get sick of you sounding like a bitter ex-girlfriend whenever you you write about ex-players & coaches.
Also, since you have implied that SC players may have used steroids and beat all of the NCAA tests, wouldn't it stand to reason that this goes on everywhere and there is a relatively even degree of guilt shared among most or all schools? Anecdotal evidence and on the field performance would suggest that UCLA runs an unquestionably clean program, so they may be the exception.
SW, why would Cush tell an AHOLE like you ANYTHING? You think you are buddies? LMAO
sugar sweeeeet assist, lbc!
but now to business: wolf, i can't believe this pup lied to your face!! if you weren't such a gentleman, i'm sure you would've flattened him for displaying such impudence when you saw him on campus yesterday.
way to take the high road, wolf.
Poor wolfbag. Left outside the loop again. Lol! Go cry to your girlfriend bukets.
CB err James-Truth borrow anything from someone lately, hay maybe James is the guy attacking women on Fucla campus.