PDA

View Full Version : Baseball Fans... Breaking News ESPN - McGwire linked to Steroids


carlos3652
03-12-2005, 09:57 PM
http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/columns/story?columnist=olney_buster&id=2011727

Updated: Mar. 12, 2005, 10:20 PM ET
Steroid allegations overshadow achievements
By Buster Olney, ESPN The Magazine


A newspaper report linking Mark McGwire to steroid use in the early 1990s all but guarantees that steroids will be as much a part of the former St. Louis Cardinals slugger's legacy as home runs, and adds more bulk to the evidence that -- from 1988 to 2004 -- baseball was thick with artificially enhanced stars.

McGwire was known only for the home runs in the marvelous season of 1998, a year in which he wrecked Roger Maris' single-season record of 61 and finished with an incredible 70. Even an Associated Press story that summer about how he used Andro -- a steroid precursor -- did not dampen the enthusiasm. McGwire repeatedly denied using steroids, well into his retirement.

Now the New York Daily News has records that allegedly detail McGwire's steroid use, with the newspaper report coming on the heels of Jose Canseco's published assertions of steroid use by Major League Baseball players.

Dating to 1988, the American League and National League have distributed a total of 34 MVP awards. Of those, the winners of 13 -- almost 40 percent -- have been linked in some way to the steroid controversy, either through personal admissions, grand jury testimony, published accusations or congressional subpoenas.

In the same way, the six greatest single-season home run performances in baseball history -- three seasons of 63 or more by Sammy Sosa; two seasons of 65 and 70 by McGwire; and the 73 homers Barry Bonds clubbed in 2001 -- have been linked in some way to the steroid controversy.

There may be many more revelations to come -- and, ironically, probably for the same reason that some of the steroid users injected themselves: Money. The best-selling success of Canseco's book has demonstrated that anybody who claims to have inside knowledge and is willing to speak out -- and perhaps tell stories about former teammates -- can make some money. As the Daily News story demonstrates, we may be hearing more from personal trainers and steroid suppliers.


All indications are that this controversy won't deter most fans from paying to see games. Even as steroid suspicions swirled around Bonds last summer, the San Francisco Giants led the NL in road attendance as fans presumably flocked to see the player who will probably finish his career as the game's most prolific home run-hitter.

But the achievements of Bonds, Giambi, Caminiti and now McGwire will always be viewed through a clouded prism, instead of through the pure crystal that we remember Aaron, Mays, Robinson and Ruth.

Standing among the living members of 500-home run club before the All-Star Game last summer, commissioner Bud Selig proclaimed this was a golden age of baseball. Since then, two sluggers with him that day have been directly implicated with steroid use and another has been called to testify about steroids.

And history is destined to recall this period as baseball's Steroid Era.

Thig Lyfe
03-12-2005, 09:58 PM
So... are we going to invade St. Louis now?

Bowser
03-12-2005, 09:59 PM
This is "breaking" news?

chiefsfolife
03-12-2005, 09:59 PM
haha...fuvc#k mark fagget ass maguire

big nasty kcnut
03-12-2005, 10:00 PM
File this under duh.

|Zach|
03-12-2005, 10:00 PM
Screw him

TheNextStep
03-12-2005, 10:01 PM
haha...fuvc#k baseball

Fixed that for you...

NaptownChief
03-12-2005, 10:05 PM
"Now the New York Daily News has records that allegedly detail McGwire's steroid use,"


Did he keep a notarized log book of his injections? Gimme a break, "has records", I'm guessing they have nothing more than the he said, she said garbage that has been floating around for years.

MGRS13
03-12-2005, 10:06 PM
WOW! In other news the sky is blue.

CosmicPal
03-12-2005, 10:06 PM
So... are we going to invade St. Louis now?

Why would we do that? There's nothing there but an arch and a muddy river....

MGRS13
03-12-2005, 10:08 PM
Why would we do that? There's nothing there but an arch and a muddy river....
Yea..no oil at all!

tk13
03-12-2005, 10:14 PM
They just had a little thing about it on ESPN. The odd part that Rece Davis brought up is that this trainer the report claims is involved supposedly worked with both McGwire and Canseco, and apparently Canseco has no recollection of ever meeting or getting steroids from the guy. He apparently quoted Canseco's lawyer as saying that if this guy was involved, he thinks Jose would've known about him... for his book and all obviously.

DaKCMan AP
03-12-2005, 10:24 PM
WE LANDED ON THE MOON!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Chiefs Pantalones
03-12-2005, 10:25 PM
They just had a little thing about it on ESPN. The odd part that Rece Davis brought up is that this trainer the report claims is involved supposedly worked with both McGwire and Canseco, and apparently Canseco has no recollection of ever meeting or getting steroids from the guy. He apparently quoted Canseco's lawyer as saying that if this guy was involved, he thinks Jose would've known about him... for his book and all obviously.

I agree, baseball has been crappy for as long as I can remember. They should ban the game from America.

;)

Rudy tossed tigger's salad
03-12-2005, 11:02 PM
Elton John Is Gay!!!!!!

milkman
03-12-2005, 11:57 PM
In other breaking news, when the sun goes down, it gets dark.

BigRedChief
03-13-2005, 12:07 AM
Big Mac used steriods? I'm shocked!

Miles
03-13-2005, 12:20 AM
http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/news/story?id=2011689

Five days before the House Government Reform Committee is scheduled to question current and former major-league baseball players about steroids, one of the subpoened players, Mark McGwire, has emerged as a prominent figure of a month-long investigation by the New York Daily News.

Mark McGwire
Getty
Mark McGwire has declined an invitation to appear at the government hearing on steroids scheduled for March 17.

Citing FBI sources, the newspaper reported that McGwire's name came up several times in a landmark anabolic steroids investigation that led to 70 convictions in the early 1990s.

While evidence against McGwire was never collected and he was not a target in the investigation, two steroid dealers caught in the probe told the Daily News that another dealer provided McGwire and Jose Canseco, among others, with illegal anabolic steroids.

The Daily News said an informant told the paper that a California man named Curtis Wenzlaff injected McGwire on several occassions at a gym in Southern California. A former member of the gym where McGwire and Wenzlaff allegedly worked out together told the paper that he heard the two discuss steroids.

According to one of the informants, who the FBI said provided credible information throughout its probe, McGwire's regimen reportedly included injecting himself in the buttocks once every three days with two testosterone substances and weekly with another.

When contacted by the Daily News, Wenzlaff had no comment about the McGwire accounts but admitted turning Canseco from a novice into an expert steroid user.

According to the paper, representatives for McGwire and Canseco said the two did not remember meeting Wenzlaff and were not aware their names came up in the investigation.

"We're not going to comment on anything at this time but we believe one should consider the sources of such allegations," McGwire's representative said.

"Jose doesn't want to deny knowing him, but he just doesn't remember the guy," Canseco's attorney said.

McGwire has always denied using steroids, including as recently as last month, when Canseco's book was published.

Wenzlaff was introduced to the A's by longtime friend Reggie Jackson, who Wenzlaff insists never used steroids or knew that Wenzlaff was dealing them.

Miles
03-13-2005, 12:24 AM
They just had a little thing about it on ESPN. The odd part that Rece Davis brought up is that this trainer the report claims is involved supposedly worked with both McGwire and Canseco, and apparently Canseco has no recollection of ever meeting or getting steroids from the guy. He apparently quoted Canseco's lawyer as saying that if this guy was involved, he thinks Jose would've known about him... for his book and all obviously.

From what I have read this whole thing seems like some questionable reporting. I figure in a few days there should be some better info on this whole deal. But for now their links to evidence are pretty sketchy.

keg in kc
03-13-2005, 12:44 AM
In other breaking news, ESPN is reporting that Paul Tagliabue is an assclown.

milkman
03-13-2005, 12:48 AM
In other breaking news, ESPN is reporting that Paul Tagliabue is an assclown.

Now that would be news.

Not the fact that Tags is an assclown.
ESPN reporting it would be.

BIG_DADDY
03-13-2005, 12:54 AM
**** ESPN
**** the New York Daily Times
**** Congress, the FBI and their supposed informants.
More than anything **** Jose Conseco the biggest weasle to ever play the game. My favorite play is still watching the ball bounce off that tards head for a home run. I wish somebody would shoot that POS.

I am getting so sick of hearing this never ending BS go on and on and on I don't even want to watch ESPN or pick up a paper anymore. The money grab taking place by the big BIO's is out of this world and nobody will say a word about that.

the Talking Can
03-13-2005, 12:57 AM
pornstars have wide vaginas..news at 11:00

keg in kc
03-13-2005, 12:59 AM
pornstars have wide vaginas..news at 11:00Even the male ones? That is news.

beavis
03-13-2005, 01:32 AM
All the stupid sarcasm aside, how exactly was he "linked" to steroids? Are we taking the word of this trainer?

RINGLEADER
03-13-2005, 02:36 AM
Does this mean Todd McFarlane has to make a big asterik in permanent Sharpie on that 70th home run ball he paid $3 mil for?

Michael Michigan
03-13-2005, 02:40 AM
Does this mean Todd McFarlane has to make a big asterik in permanent Sharpie on that 70th home run ball he paid $3 mil for?



That's just cold.

;)