Steroids "Cult" Makes the Extreme the Norm
A New York Daily News article reports that convicted dealer Curtis Wenzlaff sold illegal anabolic steroids to Mark McGwire and Jose Canseco.
Wenzlaff’s connection to Reggie Jackson—he actually lived in his home—is a fascinating new development in the steroid investigation. But almost equally bizarre is the workout regimen Wenzlaff followed while playing high school football in Southern California in the early 1980s. Wenzlaff describes midnight sessions, sleeping in a sensory deprivation tank, taping hands to weight bars, lifting while breathing pure oxygen from a tank, being shocked by a cattle prod as a motivational tool, and, of course, mixing and ingesting all sorts of steroid cocktails.
Wenzlaff’s connection to Reggie Jackson—he actually lived in his home—is a fascinating new development in the steroid investigation. But almost equally bizarre is the workout regimen Wenzlaff followed while playing high school football in Southern California in the early 1980s. Wenzlaff describes midnight sessions, sleeping in a sensory deprivation tank, taping hands to weight bars, lifting while breathing pure oxygen from a tank, being shocked by a cattle prod as a motivational tool, and, of course, mixing and ingesting all sorts of steroid cocktails.


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