By John J. Roberts
Monday, June 3rd, 2002
Let's see, we've got a recovering drug and alcohol abuser and a bitter castoff
telling us there are anywhere from 50 percent to 85 percent of current major
league baseball players using steroids.
Well, if these well-thought out estimates are to be believed, somebody has
been keeping the biggest secret in sports history, and we all owe a debt
of gratitude to Ken Caminiti and Jose Canseco for enlightening
the sporting world.
There are a couple of issues to be examined here of course. Canseco and Caminiti,
both stars at one time, recently retired. Injuries did in both of these former
league MVPs -- injuries, it could be reasoned, that were exacerbated by there
own steroid use. Where were these two beacons of information when they still
played the game?
In a recent Sports Illustrated, story Caminiti he used the drug and
he was not at all regretful he did. He also estimated use among players at
half.
During his recent appearances on several sports talk shows while stumping
his coming tell-all book in which he claims 85 percent of today's players
are users, Canseco refused to answer questions directly about his own steroid
use, if any.
Let's take a look at the numbers these two are throwing out there.
If Caminiti's more "conservative estimate" is to be believed, a lot of people
out there are lying. In the wake of this past week's "Steroid-gate" which
even now continues to mushroom, several baseball stars and managers have
intimated reactions from surprise to ignorance on the issue. But either way
they see it, there is nowhere close to half the majors on the drug.
"Only if it's in the water or there's some way players are ingesting them
without knowing it," New York Mets manager Bobby Valentine
said. "I think it's a total exaggeration, unless you're saying some of the
stuff like Met-Rx mix and the blender stuff is a steroid, then I stand
corrected."
Chicago White Sox slugger Frank Thomas, whose sheer size and
power make him a surefire candidate for suspicion, has come out firmly in
favor of testing players.
It has to be a fact some are using. If there's this much smoke, there must
be fire.
But a quick look down the rosters is all the evidence needed to rule out
well over 50 perecnt of players. First of all, knock every pitcher off the
suspect list. The bodies on almost every one of them belie the notion they
are using, plus the effects of the muscle-building drug just don't allow
the flexibility necessary to be an effective hurler.
Also, take away almost every middle infielder and center fielder -- I just
can't convince myself Rey Ordonez or Juan Pierre are on the
juice.
The numbers drop precipitously below the 50-percent level.
Numbers aside, baseball does have a problem. And even bigger than the handful
of players that use steroids, is the public relations nightmare the game
finds itself in. Testing will become necessary, if only to rid the game of
the suspicion it has been overrun by a bunch of cheaters.
And it's all because Caminiti and Canseco chose to strike back in the least
constructive manner possible at the game that provided them their livelihood
and stardom. Instead of standing alone and admitting their own indiscretions
during their careers, they chose to create the idea they were just doing
what everyone was doing -- "So don't hate me."
Childish and destructive.
Caminiti -- who since has backed off his "50-percent" estimate, saying instead
he knew "some" guys who used -- now will be known as the player who cheated
to win his National League MVP award in 1996.
Canseco lost even more. Feeling he was blackballed from baseball and forced
into retirement, he probably tossed away any chance he had of getting into
the Hall of Fame.
Now, a game that was desperately in need of a shot in the arm, has fans wondering
what players are shooting into their bodies.
Back
to MLB
Back to
Home