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There's nothing factless about the Peyton part of the documentary. His wife was shipped HGH.
Full stop.
WHAT THE FUCK DOES THAT HAVE TO DO WITH PEYTON MANNING?
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There's nothing factless about the Peyton part of the documentary. His wife was shipped HGH.
Full stop.
WHAT THE FUCK DOES THAT HAVE TO DO WITH PEYTON MANNING?
I was actually being serious. No bait. No further discussion. I was really just looking for a yes or no answer.I'm not going to take the bait. Let's keep this about Manning's cheating.
As a fan of the game, I'm really disappointed and liken this to the Bonds situation. Manning was naturally one of the best of his era. He didn't need to cheat. Some guys just let their egos get the best of them and can't help themselves.
Unfortunately.Dude, he's obviously trolling. I can't believe you're engaging.
Full stop.
WHAT THE FUCK DOES THAT HAVE TO DO WITH PEYTON MANNING?
So, was the documentary "factless" regarding Peyton or not?
Well, considering he is a professional athlete who was rehabbing from a potentially career-ending injury when the HGH was allegedly sent to his wife....it certainly makes one suspicious.
This was also the same excuse that Roger Clemens used. Again, suspicious.
It might mean nothing. She might have been taking the HGH herself (although it almost assuredly was not legally prescribed--not that means anything but again warrants suspicion). But IMO it certainly doesn't mean we should just take Peyton's word for it that he wasn't taking his wife's HGH.
I really do not get why you think one of the greatest NFL players ever getting HGH shipped to his wife is not potentially suspicious. But we're clearly going to have to agree to disagree on that.
This is an absurd take. I will bet my house that Peyton Manning's wife was not taking HGH. To keep this charade going like you believe that the HGH was shipped to his wife for her use is weird and dishonest.
^If I'm being intentionally dense, then you're being intentionally naive for thinking a HOF athlete just so happened to have HGH illegally prescribed to his wife while he was going through a potentially career-ending surgery. I don't care if he did it. I acknowledge it will be impossible to prove it. It doesn't mean that everyone should just take his word that he wasn't taking his wife's HGH.
been paying zero attention to this "story" but see there is lots of debate here from whom I deem credible posters, so my question is:
does this thing have any legs?
can someone give cliff notes of where the "story" is?
is it getting traction in any way, have any credulity, or fading away (as I thought it had already)?
This is comical. On what grounds? See point 1, and point 3. Literally none of my bullet points are logically assailable. Just because you personally choose to reject the notion that she could have been taking HGH is completely worthless.
Honestly, you all are becoming a joke on this topic. I don't want to be a total asshole here, but the fact that you can't look in the mirror and realize the common thread between the only people taking your line of argument in this thread is rich.
been paying zero attention to this "story" but see there is lots of debate here from whom I deem credible posters, so my question is:
does this thing have any legs?
can someone give cliff notes of where the "story" is?
is it getting traction in any way, have any credulity, or fading away (as I thought it had already)?
Also other athletes have been linked by the same media outlet and are now suing.1. Ashley Manning was shipped HGH, possibly illegally.
2. If you don't believe she could have been using the HGH, then some people conclude Peyton must have been using it.
The end.
If you believe that an athlete who was facing a career ending injury just so happened to be married to someone who is part of an infinitesimal percentage of the population who just so happened to require HGH for valid medical reasons at that exact point in time then you are so credulous of a person as to be a danger to yourself as exceptionally susceptible to being taken advantage of. Especially when the source of that HGH was not a doctor that a regular woman might otherwise see, but a clinic with ties to someone whose career is getting elicit PEDs to athletes. You're getting upset and lobbing some insults my way, but your underlying assumption here (that Peyton Manning's wife was the end user of HGH sent in her name) is not even in the realm of remote plausibility.
Or he was using quintuple reverse psychology and did it knowing what you posted would be a plausible explanation.People think Peyton Manning decided to try and fool everyone and ship the HGH to his wife instead of himself. So either Manning is really dumb or it wasn't for him.
He literally could have had it shipped to some P.O. Box or to some other person who he doesn't live with if he was trying to fool everyone. Shipping it to his wife would be the next dumbest thing for him to do besides shipping it to himself.
Get real people.
How is it not in the realm of possibility? I'll wait.
I mean, you could wait, or you could read every other post I've made in this thread.
Housewives do not take HGH. That's not a thing that happens. There may be a handful of women Ashley Manning's age in the country that take HGH for any reason - legit medical or otherwise. The idea that at the exact time Peyton Manning was facing a situation in which many other athletes have used HGH or other PEDs, his wife happened to join the impossibly small group of housewives on HGH is absurd on its face. It defies credulity. The odds of that happening are probably incalculably low.
In fact, it is so absurd to think that Ashley Manning received HGH for her personal use that if she had actually wanted to get HGH for herself, her husband would have forbade it on the grounds that nobody would ever believe that she was really the user of HGH sent to their house if the story ever got out!
You are a smart guy. I frankly do not believe that you believe what you are arguing here. Any amount of healthy skepticism at all would force you to conclude that the story that the HGH were for the wife is insulting to your intelligence.
People think Peyton Manning decided to try and fool everyone and ship the HGH to his wife instead of himself. So either Manning is really dumb or it wasn't for him.
He literally could have had it shipped to some P.O. Box or to some other person who he doesn't live with if he was trying to fool everyone. Shipping it to his wife would be the next dumbest thing for him to do besides shipping it to himself.
Get real people.
I mean, you could wait, or you could read every other post I've made in this thread.
Housewives do not take HGH. That's not a thing that happens.
I said yesterday that it is amazing he was that lazy in covering his tracks. But if he was smart enough to know that sending it to his wife was insufficient then wouldn't he be smart enough to tell his wife she can't have HGH shipped to her house? So I think this argument cancels itself out in each direction. The real question is do you think Ashley Manning needed HGH at the exact same moment her husband could certainly have benefitted from it to save his career. Keep in mind the very tiny percentage of the population that actually needs HGH. If you can satisfy yourself that that is reasonable, then good for you. But I just cannot convince myself there is any chance that is the case.
I have no idea why people would take HGH because I'm not a doctor, personal trainer, or anyone that has knowledge about these things. Neither are you. The bottom line is that if this was Giselle and Tom there's no way you would take the position that it's "implausible" that the HGH was not for Peyton Manning. In fact, during Deflategate, all you did was say (over and over again) that "we don't know what happened one way or the other" or something to that effect.
This is true. And this was true with Deflategate. What annoys Patriots fans is that Brady was guilty until proven innocent while the opposite is true with the media (and in this thread) with Peyton.
Brady was discussed in text messages. He also said during the initial press conference that he had no idea what happens to balls before games or something like that which was false. That's much more direct evidence than anything in this situation with Manning.
Q: When and how did you supposedly alter the balls?
TB: I didn’t have any – I didn’t alter the ball in any way. I have a process that I go through before every game where I go in and I pick the footballs that I want to use for the game. Our equipment guys do a great job of breaking the balls in. they have a process that they go through. When I pick those balls out, at that point to me they’re perfect. I don’t want anyone touching the balls after that. I don’t want anyone rubbing them, putting any air in them, taking any air out. To me those balls are perfect and that’s what I expect when I show up on the field. That happened obviously on Sunday night. It was the same process that I always go through. I didn’t think anything of it. Obviously I woke up Monday morning and answered a question on the radio about it and that was the first I really hard about it.
Q: This has raised a lot of uncomfortable conversations for people around this country who view you as their idol. The question they’re asking themselves is, ‘What’s up with our hero?’ Can you answer right now, is Tom Brady a cheater?
TB: I don’t believe so. I feel like I’ve always played within the rules. I would never do anything to break the rules. I believe in fair play and I respect the league and everything they’re doing to try to create a very competitive playing field for all the NFL teams. It’s a very competitive league. Every team is trying to do the best they can to win every week. I believe in fair play and I’ll always believe in that for as long as I’m playing.
The bottom line is that if this was Giselle and Tom there's no way you would take the position that it's "implausible" that the HGH was not for Peyton Manning. In fact, during Deflategate, all you did was say (over and over again) that "we don't know what happened one way or the other" or something to that effect.
Brady was discussed in text messages. He also said during the initial press conference that he had no idea what happens to balls before games or something like that which was false. That's much more direct evidence than anything in this situation with Manning.
I said yesterday that it is amazing he was that lazy in covering his tracks. But if he was smart enough to know that sending it to his wife was insufficient then wouldn't he be smart enough to tell his wife she can't have HGH shipped to her house? So I think this argument cancels itself out in each direction. The real question is do you think Ashley Manning needed HGH at the exact same moment her husband could certainly have benefitted from it to save his career. Keep in mind the very tiny percentage of the population that actually needs HGH. If you can satisfy yourself that that is reasonable, then good for you. But I just cannot convince myself there is any chance that is the case.
Those texts weren't released until months after everyone determined that Brady was guilty.
He also didn't say that at all. These were the first two questions he was asked in his press conference. If you can't see the double standard being applied with Manning then I don't know what to tell you.
The distinction in my mind is that here you actually know there was HGH sent to the house, so it becomes a question of what is the likely reason why that is. With the deflategate thing, the whole issue was that we never really knew whether there was actually air taken out of the footballs. So there were many more questions and leaps of logic required there.
But here's the thing, I don't actually care if the guy took HGH. I don't want him punished or embarrassed or any of that. I just don't think the media is handling the two stories consistently or fairly vis a vis each other.
What I was referring to (sorry if I misspoke) is that he said in that press conference that he liked his balls to be at 12.5 and he had this whole process before the game of selecting footballs and then in the next breath he said something along the lines of "I have no idea what an underinflated ball feels like." I don't remember the exact line.
Anyway it doesn't matter. Once Spygate happened the Patriots organization lost any sort of presumption of innocence standard I would give any other team. Peyton Manning has never done anything wrong so I will presume he is innocent unless and until some sort of hard evidence tells me he is not. Brady does not get that luxury.