The NBA along with the NBA Players Association announced in a press release that next season the league will use blood tests to detect Human Growth Hormones (HGH) in players.
“The NBA and the National Basketball Players Association announced today that blood testing for Human Growth Hormone (HGH) will commence under the league’s anti-drug program, effective with the 2015-16 NBA season.
“As part of the collective bargaining negotiations in 2011, the NBA and the Players Association agreed to a process for determining how HGH blood testing would be implemented in the NBA. With that process now completed, beginning with the start of 2015 NBA training camps, all NBA players will be subject to three random, unannounced HGH tests annually (two in-season, one off-season), and players will also be subject to reasonable cause testing for HGH.
If a player tests positive for HGH, he will be suspended 20 games for his first violation and 45 games for his second violation, and he will be dismissed and disqualified from the NBA for his third violation.”
The NBA is starting to take on a harsher approach, like the MLB with suspensions and for a third time violator being banishment from the league.
Rashard Lewis, Hedo Turkoglu and most recently Grizzlies guard Nick Calathes have been suspended after testing positive for various types of steroids so it should be interesting to see if the NBA has a “HGH problem.”