gh123 wrote:Phish Tank wrote:gh123 wrote:
He had a plethora of lower body injuries. The dude missed more than 50% of his career including the off-season. And about anemia I don't know what his case is, but they didn't seem to solve it in the NYK, so I don't know if it's solvable.
Anemia's not solvable, it has to be managed. That means nutrition and all of that. Then again, KP has to listen to the nutritionists and all of them. Instead, he'll rely on his people...
Oh right, I remember a Knicks fan told me that instead of getting proper treatment he got involved with some con master of a doctor lol. And it's always like this, he always gets together with bad apples and that's where some of his problems stem from.
His trainer is mad suspicious

Oh yes, there’s more to him than gargantuan arms and a fame hungry heart. Back in 2004, Colker’s expertise was called into question when a class action lawsuit in California, against a company called Cytodyne, claimed that Colker’s trial results concerning a weight-loss aid called Xenadrine RFA-1 (which contained now-illegal ephedra) were suspect. The judge ruled in favor of the plaintiffs and awarded them $12.5 million, saying that Colker lacked credibility. Though, that same study was upheld in a Utah court. Forbes ran a story about the whole ephedra mess that year, and mentioned Colker’s involvement specifically. That earned them an angry and defensive letter from his attorney.
Colker was also named, in 2003, in three other lawsuits in West Virginia, Illinois, and Missouri for pushing a weight-loss supplement called Hydroxycut. The suits claimed that Colker’s various test results—culled from a study at his own Peak Wellness Center in Greenwich (there’s an outpost in Beverly Hills, too)—were falsified in an effort to hide the fact that ephedra can, you know, kill you and stuff. He was dropped from the lawsuit in Missouri, and later appointed a chairperson on the “Scientific Advisory Board” for a, you guessed it, dietary supplement company.
Colker, in a sitdown with the Daily News last month, peeled back the curtain on the methods – some of which he proudly acknowledges are controversial in his field