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Doug Barron vs PGA Tour

I’m serving a one-year suspension on the PGA Tour, and three weeks ago I got a letter from the USGA informing me that my Tour ban will keep me out of U.S. Open qualifying, too. My crime? Bad genetics.

I’m 40 and have played in 338 events on the PGA and Nationwide tours, earning $3.2 million. I’ve been taking propanolol, a ­beta-blocker, since 1987, when I was found to have mitral valve prolapse, a heart condition. In 2005 low testosterone was diagnosed, and I began taking synthetic testosterone.

My last full year on Tour was 2006, but when the Tour announced its drug-­testing policy in 2008, I applied for a Therapeutic Use Exemption, or TUE. The Tour’s physician looked at my records and ruled that my testosterone level of 296 was within the Tour’s normal range. My doctors disagree. So does the Food and Drug Administration, which calls a level of 400 low for a man my age.

I haven’t changed much. I weighed 165 before 2005 and I weigh 165 now. My ­driving-distance average has gone up exactly .8 of a yard. Last year, against doctors’ orders, I stopped taking testosterone and began weaning myself off propanolol. Without the supplemental hormones my testosterone level dropped, my sex drive and energy flatlined, and my concentration waned.

I played four Nationwide events early in 2009 and was never tested (I think because officials knew about my condition). In June, I received a sponsor’s exemption to the Tour’s St. Jude Classic. As the tournament approached, I was so depleted I could hardly get out of bed, so I took a shot of testosterone. I knew I was tempting fate.

I shot 72 in the first round, and was then asked to supply a urine sample. Last November, I was notified that I’d tested positive. I was suspended and blocked from Q school. I planned to appeal, but commissioner Tim Finchem, the sole arbiter in such cases, told me I’d never win.

Other players have reportedly received TUEs. Why? What are their levels and what are they taking? I’m not a conspiracy theorist, but one Tour round, one drug test, for a guy with a widely known issue, didn’t feel right. Was I being made an example?

I’ve filed a federal lawsuit,and my lawyers are negotiating with the Tour in an attempt to settle the case. If they don’t succeed by the end of this month, the suit will proceed and the Tour may have to reveal the results of every drug test it has administered and what TUEs it has granted.

My peers have been supportive. They know I’m not looking to start a witch hunt. All I’m trying to do is clear my name and ensure that the Tour creates a transparent process so that all players with legitimate medical issues are treated equally.

Thanks for the update.

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Master Ratings Increased 50% – go Tiger

Masters Ratings Increase by 50 Percent. It appears as if everyone and their mama tuned in to watch Tiger Woods tee off for the first time since his cheating scandal, as ESPN’s coverage of the Masters’ first round on Thursday drew 4.9 million viewers — the highest U.S. audience ever for a golf event on cable television. The total is 50 percent more viewers than last year’s opening day, and 80 percent more than the first round in 2008, according to the Nielsen Co. The sports network covered Woods’ first tee shot live within “SportsCenter” more than two hours before regular coverage started on Thursday. Nielsen said its audience was double what it gets on a typical Thursday afternoon.

Tiger Woods – last call…

Now that Tiger Woods admitted to cheating on his wife with several women, will he have to drop his friends? In the new issue of Vanity Fair magazine, fingers are clearly pointed at sports greats Michael Jordan and Charles Barkley. The article says these two were in cahoots with Woods and were a bad influence on him. Was it peer pressure? Did Tiger want to just fit in? Sources say yes, and the parties and women were notorious. Woods has solely taken the blame for his actions, but the article says his friends helped and enabled him. Woods returns to golfing with the Masters Tournament, but don’t look for his long suffering wife Elin to be by his side. She will not be attending.

I don’t know about the rest of the blogging world, but this is it for me. I’m truly sick of hearing
about Tiger Woods. Now if he wins the Masters I assure you I will speak of it here, and only the
Masters Tournament. Wish you luck Tiger!