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MLB to expand testing for HGH

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Selig praised the cooperation of the players association, once a staunch opponent of drug testing, in agreeing to the expansion.

“Michael Weiner and the union deserve credit,” Selig said. “Way back when they were having a lot of problems I didn’t give them credit, but they do.”

Christiane Ayotte, director of the Canadian laboratory, said that the addition of random blood testing and a “longitudinal profiling program makes baseball’s program second to none in detecting and deterring the use of synthetic HGH and testosterone.”

She said the program compares favorably with any program conducted by WADA.

HGH testing remains a contentious issue in the NFL. At a hearing last month, U.S. Rep. Elijah Cummings, the ranking Democrat on the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, accused the NFL players’ union of trying to back out of HGH testing.

“Other professional sports leagues, including the National Football League, must also implement their own robust testing regimes,” Cummings and committee chairman Darrel Issa said in a statement Thursday. “Major League Baseball’s announcement increases the pressure on the NFL and its players to deliver on pledges to conduct HGH testing made in their collective bargaining agreement that was signed two years ago.”

NFL spokesman Greg Aiello said Thursday “we hope the MLB players’ union will inspire the NFLPA to stop its stalling tactics and fulfill its commitment to begin testing for HGH.”

If the NFLPA stands for player health and safety, it should follow the lead of the MLB players’ union and end the delay.”

NFLPA spokesman George Atallah says the union is not backing out of anything but was looking to resolve scientific issues surrounding the tests. HGH testing is part of the 10-year labor agreement reached in 2011 but protocols must be agreed to by both sides.

“If the league had held up their commitment to population study, we could have been first,” Atallah said.

At the time of last month’s congressional hearing, NFL senior vice president Adolpho Birch called the union’s insistence on a population study to determine whether current HGH tests are appropriate a delay tactic that threatened that league’s leadership in drug testing matters.

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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