Does anyone else get a kick out of the pic they keep showing of the reff who allegedly fixed those games? He looks like such a sad ****.
I loved Steve Nash's reaction upon hearing the news. They told him about it at a press conference and his reaction was "Did he reff game five of the Spurs-Suns series?"
EDIT: I did a google search, and I couldn't find an exact quote, but I thought this pic was a little funny -
^^^
Every pic I could find of this guy has players arguing with him. I don't know what that's more of a testiment to, his fixing of the games, his ****** reffing, or the whininess of the modern NBA player. Sadly, it's probably a mix of all three.
<div class="quote_poster">Bahir Wrote</div><div class="quote_post">It's not like protein powders are some unnatural compound. Most protein powders are made of whey, somthing that is extracted from milk when cheese is made. From what I hear though, some manufacturers in the US add hormonal substances to their product (without saying so) to make them more potent. In the states, there are a lot more legal hormonal compunds than there is in other parts of the world, particularly in the European Union, which is why many american products are banned here. Recently, there was an article in a big swedish newspaper about an american ZMA product (which should only contain Zink, Magnesium and vitamin B6, all perfectly legal substances) that had DHEA (a steroid prohormone, illegal in the EU) secretly added to it by the manufacturers.
As some of you know, I'm working on an article series covering nutrition, supplements and weight training, and most of these questions and topics will be answered there.
As for you Umair, your first focus, if you want to gain weight, should be to eat and eat some more (healthy, protein rich foods) and join a gym and start doing compound exercises such as squats, deadlifts and bench press.</div>
^^^
You should really listen to the man, Umair. We all know nutrition and exercise from our personal experience, but it's practically Bahir's life.