Author Topic: Justin Charles tells of drug disgrace & claims AFL cover-up (Herald-Sun)  (Read 2481 times)

Offline one-eyed

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Justin Charles tells of drug disgrace

   Mark Robinson
    From: Herald Sun
    June 27, 2011


FOURTEEN years after entering his own AFL hall of infamy as the only player found guilty of using a performance-enhancing anabolic steroid, Justin Charles's memories remain raw.

Today, the Tigers ruckman can recall in graphic detail three conversations after he was told he'd tested positive.

The first was with the AFL. Another was with Richmond, coach Robert Walls and his teammates.

The third, which tested his soul to the core, was with his father, John.

"I rang (the AFL) and got straight through," Charles said.

"I said I needed to see them, that it was urgent, and they said, come in.

"I went in, and said, 'I have tested positive to steroids and this is the story'.

"My dad always said you can't do any worse than tell the truth, and that no one was going to think worse of you if you told the truth and, oh God, that's put me in good stead. If you're lying, then you've got to start to defend the indefensible, and I couldn't do it.

"It was the best thing I did after I made a real bad decision."

Then came the Tigers.

"Richmond were awesome. Leon Daphne (then president), gee, talk about great people," he said.

"I remember going into a meeting and telling everybody and it was void of sound. You know, as we're talking I'm back there now. Wow. It was just ... quiet.

"They were shocked. It's maybe why I even thought I'd get away with it, because I'd be the last person they'd think, because of my work ethic.

"I did everything for my teammates and this is why ... this was the most selfish thing you could ever do."

And finally, Dad.

"My dad's a unique man, in that the worse the situation is, the better he is," he said.

"When I told him the bald facts, there was silence.

"It felt like 10 years of silence, and I remember thinking, 'Please, Dad, just say something, anything'.

"And he finally said something along the lines of, 'Right, how do we make this better? How do we get back on the track?'

"He couldn't have said anything better at the time. My dad ... "

Charles cried once in his telling of his story. Back then, on every front page newspaper in the country, he was the DRUG CHEAT. On the nightly TV news and radio, he cried too many times to remember.

But telling his story for the first time, about why he had six injections of boldenone in the bathroom of his parents' home in the pre-season of '97, he cries not because of the shame he inflicted on himself and his parents, but because of footy itself. Footy was his everything. He said he would've done anything for footy, and ultimately he did.

When he was caught, he wrote a poem. He hunted all over his Williamstown home at the weekend, trying to find it and was devastated when he couldn't.

"I wanted everyone to read it," he said.

"It was about how much you grow up in football. You grow up with your first tentative steps, then you work out you've got some aptitude for the game. All of a sudden it gives grounds for communication and love with your dad ... "

He cries.

"And you want to make your dad proud, and you've got this context to really prove your manhood to your dad. It's a big thing. And then that translates to your coach, that father-type thing. And that was Wallsy. You know, you give everything to the game and you can't ask for anything back.

"It will you strip you naked, it will take away your dignity, but the highs ... it is worth it just for those highs."

Charles took the drug, he said, because he finally had a reputation as a good footballer. In 1996, he finished equal third behind Essendon's James Hird and Brisbane's Michael Voss in the Brownlow Medal.

A footy-crazy kid, he had watched 15 Brownlow telecasts and now was suddenly leading the count.

"Imagine if I'd won the Brownlow Medal, and what happened the next year," he says now.

A player with an outstanding work ethic suddenly was on the edge of greatness. It was as if he were in a fast car without brakes. He convinced himself he was a warrior and nothing, injuries or opponents, could stop him.

His confidence spawned an arrogance, a belief that he was untouchable.

Then came the injuries. And the drugs.

"I was really building momentum and I probably had this false impression about my importance to the team," he said.

"Not that they couldn't win without me, but they would go better with me in it.

"Wallsy was coaching me, and it was one of the real low points, that I'd really let Wallsy down. I think about him more than my teammates. I think of everybody, but in particular Wallsy, because he really supported and encouraged me."

Charles suffered muscle and tissue injuries in the next pre-season. He won't say how he procured the steroids, or who injected them.

"It was wrong, and I can look back and say absolutely it was wrong," he said.

"But I can tell you, I was thinking here's a tool I can use which is going to get me back to playing football.

"And I'm not going to let anyone tell me what I can and can't do to do my job. What I knew about steroids is they could heal muscle tissue, and that was the premise on which I took it.

And if you wanted them, they were quite easily procured, and they were not expensive."

Charles had a poor 1997 season, despite using steroids. Photos show him as a colossus of a man, all muscle and oozing strength, but his football suffered. His last game that year was Round 20 versus North Melbourne.

Charles was tested on June 11, two days before the Round 12 game against Sydney, giving two urine samples.

Initially, he was notified by letter he was positive for the first sample. He also remembers a phone conversation with a drug agency official.

"I was at home, and the phone rang. I answered the phone and it was, 'Look, you have tested positive to a banned substance. Do you have any comment?'

"I said no. They said, would I like to be present for the testing for the B sample? I said, 'I don't think that will be necessary'.

"In my mind, I thought s---, this should be out of my system long ago. It was months ago I took it, and it was almost mid-year.

"Then I learnt very quickly about water-based and oil-based steroids and I took oil-based, which was going to stay in the system. If I had taken water-based, it was gone.

"It was interesting because there were players, and quite publicly (one player) said on The Footy Show, 'Why didn't he just take water-based?'

"He said that at the time. Players knew about these things."

Charles served his 16-game suspension, returning to play with the Tigers in Round 17, 1998, against Geelong. The next week he played against Hawthorn, suffered a crippling hip injury, and never played again.

The immediate years afterwards were difficult.

He would meet people, introduce himself, and they'd twig that he was the Justin Charles. Part of his post-career journey was lecturing young AFL players.

He told them footy was a war of attrition, that attitude won them success.

As for his reputation, Charles knows it once was scuttled. "Everyone's reputation is moment to moment.

"I'd like to think since then I've done a pretty good job establishing my self-respect, my respect for others, my integrity, telling the truth ... that's all you can do.

"You know, I'm not a bad person," he says. "I just did a bad thing.

http://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/afl/justin-charles-tells-of-drug-disgrace/story-e6frf9jf-1226082383335

Offline one-eyed

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Justin Charles claims AFL cover-up in drug scandal

   Mark Robinson
    From: Herald Sun
    June 27, 2011


THE footballer who tested positive to an anabolic steroid in the AFL's first major drug scandal claims there was a league cover-up.

Former Tigers ruckman Justin Charles, who was suspended for 16 weeks in 1997, claims senior AFL officials glossed over information he supplied.

Charles took the banned drug, boldenone, six times over four weeks while injured in the 1997 pre-season.

He said he gave the AFL information about how he procured the drug, but it chose not to act.

The AFL last night said it was unaware of the claim.

Charles, in his first tell-all interview since his suspension, also claims he could have produced a list of footballers he believed were taking steroids at the time.

"You ask how I got them? I told the AFL, and I was completely honest with them and told them exactly where I got them," he said.

"And when I told them, they said: 'OK, we'll pretend we didn't hear that'."

He refused to reveal it to the Herald Sun.

"Absolutely not. It was a risk even telling the AFL," he said.

Asked if he believed there had been a cover-up, Charles said: "It's so controversial and it would've opened a can of worms. No one wanted to go down that path ... "

It's understood the AFL acted, in part, to protect Charles.

Charles said the personal support from then AFL football operations boss Ian Collins, chief executive Wayne Jackson and then Richmond president Leon Daphne had been amazing.

"Ian Collins was so fatherly to me. He was a great help and support through really difficult times, even though he, and Leon Daphne, publicly held me at arm's length," he said.

Charles, 40, is the only AFL player to have tested positive for steroid use.

He said there had been widespread speculation that other players were also using steroids.

"I felt from my observation that those anecdotal stories were true," he said.

Jackson last night told the Herald Sun he could not recall if Charles had told the AFL where he got the drug.

"I certainly don't remember that," he said.

Collins did not return a call yesterday.

AFL football operations manager Adrian Anderson said: "That is the first I have ever heard of that claim.

"We have not had a positive test for performance-enhancing drugs since Justin Charles, but if we ever had any information about supplying performance-enhancing drugs that is exactly the information we would share with ASADA, police and Customs.

"If Justin has any relevant information he has a responsibility to pass it on.

"The AFL is proud of its record on the fight against performance enhancing drugs and the cooperation and collaboration we have with ASADA and other authorities and there is no way that any such information would not be passed onto authorities."

http://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/afl/justin-charles-claims-afl-cover-up-in-drug-scandal/story-e6frf9jf-1226082374363

Justin Charles' decade of twists, turns

   Mark Robinson
    From: Herald Sun
    June 27, 2011


A FATHER of two girls, Justin Charles has had a difficult life post-footy because of a crippling hip injury.

The injury ended his 90-game AFL career in 1998 and he did not fully recover until after an operation 10 years later.

A plumber by trade, he was forced to abandon the tools for an array of jobs.

He was part-owner of the Steam Packet Hotel in Williamstown, did public speaking engagements, returned to plumbing, completed a hypnotherapy course, bought a coffee-shop franchise and is working now with health and nutrition products.

A professional baseballer with the Florida Marlins in 1994, Charles continued to play baseball in the summer months until his hip injury, and returned to the sport with Geelong in the Victorian Baseball Association for the 2009-10 season, where he is assistant coach.

His girls, Lily, 5, and Meike, two months, are the joys at the end of a tortuous decade.

His speaking engagements included talks with AFL players under the drug education program. The 40-year-old continues to live in Williamstown.

http://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/afl/justin-charles-decade-of-twists-turns/story-e6frf9jf-1226082385370

Offline Owl

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The AFL drug patsy, as opposed to drug heroes like Cousins.  See if he was at another club, they wouldn't of crucified him, but it was RFC, we were down, they were shafting us over trades anyway, why not go for broke and scapegoat our injured ruckman.
Lots of people name their swords......

Offline RollsRoyce

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Something that always rankled me about this story was the double standard applied to two different players. Justin didn't take the drug to build up muscle mass, and therefore give himself an unfair edge in strength over his opponents. He took it to repair and manage an injury. Alistair Lynch also took a banned substance to combat chronic fatigue syndrome, which in effect is also like managing an injury, or some condition that prevents you from playing. Yet the AFL had no problem with that.

Tigermonk

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Something that always rankled me about this story was the double standard applied to two different players. Justin didn't take the drug to build up muscle mass, and therefore give himself an unfair edge in strength over his opponents. He took it to repair and manage an injury. Alistair Lynch also took a banned substance to combat chronic fatigue syndrome, which in effect is also like managing an injury, or some condition that prevents you from playing. Yet the AFL had no problem with that.

Understand what your saying here RollsRoyce but the Alistair Lynch situation was controlled by a doctor & specialist & is seen different.
What Lynch was battling was so severe he was debiltated after the 1st warm up like he had been given a sleeping tablet. l know this first hand because l have contact with several Brisbane players at the time & still to this day.
Justin Charles was a scapegoat but his debiltating injury was never under control. The reason Roids are so condemed is that they damage the body & have many nasty & lasting effects.  They even destroy the crown jewels  ;D Justin should have been treated better but never had the support given to him like others. l know others from the past who got caught & were swept out of AFL under the carpet cause drugs are rife. AFL is in denile

Is Viagra on the banned substance list.

Offline one-eyed

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No AFL cover-up: Charles
By Adam McNicol
7:16 PM Wed 29 Jun, 2011



FORMER Western Bulldogs and Richmond ruckman Justin Charles has clarified his recent statements about the AFL's conduct when he was suspended for taking performance-enhancing drugs in 1997.

An article published in the Herald Sun on Monday stated that Charles believed important information about where he sourced the drugs was covered up by the AFL at the time.

But the 41-year-old, who was suspended for 16 weeks in 1997 after being found guilty of using anabolic steroids, is adamant that he did not make such a claim.

"I never said it was a cover-up," Charles told afl.com.au on Wednesday evening.

"I never wanted to put the AFL under the pump. I think the AFL are doing a wonderful job.

"The last thing we want is to be accusing the AFL of something that's not true.

"And it's a nasty word. Cover-up is a nasty word and it's not useful for anyone because it's not true.

"It opens a can of worms and it's just not true."

Charles, who played 90 matches for the Bulldogs and the Tigers between 1989 and 1998, has again recounted the hearing that took place after he tested positive.

"When I went into the hearing - and this is 14 years ago by the way - the first item on the agenda was, 'Where did you get it? Did you get it from within football circles?'

"I said, 'Absolutely and unequivocally not'. They kept probing because they wanted to make sure it wasn't within football circles, because they would've had to do something about it.

"I told them the broad industry and where it came from and they were satisfied that it wasn't within football circles, therefore not within their jurisdiction, so we moved to the next item."

http://www.afl.com.au/news/newsarticle/tabid/208/newsid/117435/default.aspx