Wow, McGwire used steriods!

Tractorman

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McGwire admits using steroids in 70-HR year - Baseball- nbcsports.msnbc.com
NEW YORK - Mark McGwire finally came clean Monday, admitting he used steroids when he broke baseball’s home run record in 1998.

McGwire said in a statement sent to The Associated Press on Monday that he used steroids on and off for nearly a decade.

“I wish I had never touched steroids,” McGwire said in a statement. “It was foolish and it was a mistake. I truly apologize. Looking back, I wish I had never played during the steroid era.”
McGwire also used human growth hormone, a person close to McGwire said, speaking on condition of anonymity because McGwire didn’t include that detail in his statement.

McGwire’s decision to admit using steroids was prompted by his decision to become hitting coach of the St. Louis Cardinals, his final big league team. Tony La Russa, McGwire’s manager in Oakland and St. Louis, has been among McGwire’s biggest supporters and thinks returning to the field can restore the former slugger’s reputation.

“I never knew when, but I always knew this day would come,” McGwire said. “It’s time for me to talk about the past and to confirm what people have suspected.”

He became the second major baseball star in less than a year to admit using illegal steroids, following the New York Yankees’ Alex Rodriguez last February.

Others have been tainted but have denied knowingly using illegal drugs, including Barry Bonds, Roger Clemens, Sammy Sosa and David Ortiz.

Bonds has been indicted on charges he made false statements to a federal grand jury and obstructed justice. Clemens is under investigation by a federal grand jury trying to determine whether he lied to a congressional committee.

“I’m sure people will wonder if I could have hit all those home runs had I never taken steroids,” McGwire said. “I had good years when I didn’t take any, and I had bad years when I didn’t take any. I had good years when I took steroids, and I had bad years when I took steroids. But no matter what, I shouldn’t have done it and for that I’m truly sorry.”

Big Mac’s reputation has been in tatters since March 17, 2005, when he refused to answer questions at a Congressional hearing. Instead, he repeatedly said “I’m not here to talk about the past” when asked whether he took illegal steroids when he hit a then-record 70 home runs in 1998 or at any other time.

“After all this time, I want to come clean,” he said. “I was not in a position to do that five years ago in my congressional testimony, but now I feel an obligation to discuss this and to answer questions about it. I’ll do that, and then I just want to help my team.”

The person close to McGwire said McGwire made the decision not to answer questions at that hearing on the advice of his lawyers.

McGwire disappeared from the public eye following his retirement as a player following the 2001 season. When the Cardinals hired the 47-year-old as coach on Oct. 26, they said he would address questions before spring training, and Monday’s statement broke his silence.

“I remember trying steroids very briefly in the 1989/1990 offseason and then after I was injured in 1993, I used steroids again,” McGwire said in his statement. “I used them on occasion throughout the ’90s, including during the 1998 season.”

McGwire said he took steroids to get back on the field, sounding much like the Yankees’ Andy Pettitte two years ago when he admitted using HGH.

“During the mid-’90s, I went on the DL seven times and missed 228 games over five years,” McGwire said in the statement. “I experienced a lot of injuries, including a ribcage strain, a torn left heel muscle, a stress fracture of the left heel, and a torn right heel muscle. It was definitely a miserable bunch of years, and I told myself that steroids could help me recover faster. I thought they would help me heal and prevent injuries, too.”
Since the congressional hearing, baseball owners and players toughened their drug program twice, increasing the penalty for a first steroids offense from 10 days to 50 games in November 2005 and strengthening the power of the independent administrator in April 2008, following the publication of the Mitchell Report.

“Baseball is really different now — it’s been cleaned up,” McGwire said. “The commissioner and the players’ association implemented testing and they cracked down, and I’m glad they did.”

Well, at least there's closure to the whole issue.
 

97desertCobra

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No surprise at all. Whats crazy to me is how rampant steroid use is in baseball. I mean, compared to many other sports baseball is one of the least physically demanding sports out there!
 

_GuRu_

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I think it was obvious to everyone that McGwire was taking PED's. But who cares, arent the majority of players (not ALL) over the last 10 years taking them too? Him and Sosa single handedly resurrected the game in 1998, that was the most excitement baseball had seen in decades. I still consider him a great player, and enjoyed watching him hit towering homeruns just like 99% of people did 10 years ago.
 

ModMike1572

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No surprise at all. Whats crazy to me is how rampant steroid use is in baseball. I mean, compared to many other sports baseball is one of the least physically demanding sports out there!

Have you ever played baseball? Hitting is all about the Bat-Speed.

I could only imagine how much better I would have been when I played if I was juicing and working out like a lot of these guys. I would never miss an inside fastball again, and I would be able to wait that extra split second. My plate discipline would have been a ton better. Steroids DO make you a good hitter.
 

01svtL

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Have you ever played baseball? Hitting is all about the Bat-Speed.

I could only imagine how much better I would have been when I played if I was juicing and working out like a lot of these guys. I would never miss an inside fastball again, and I would be able to wait that extra split second. My plate discipline would have been a ton better. Steroids DO make you a good hitter.

Wow, I thought you were a baseball fan. Just a Yankees fan I guess.

That entire statement is ridiculous. Hitting is all about eye-hand coordination. You can swing as fast as you want. If you can't read/see the ball, what's the point? Steroids do NOT create skill. Regardless of what Bonds took, his swing is one of the most beautiful swings in baseball. He was a good hitter, period. Steroids did NOT create him. If you believe otherwise, you probably shouldn't speak where educated people can hear you.


By your retarded logic, Ronnie Coleman should play baseball. He'd be the greatest hitter evaaaarrrrrr!
 
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Sonic_GT

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So he wants a job as a batting coach in MLB after admitting that he was using the majority of his career? Thats a pretty good slap in the face at MLB. Juicing your way into baseball history and then asking for another job. :nonono:
 

canibus

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Wow, I thought you were a baseball fan. Just a Yankees fan I guess.

That entire statement is ridiculous. Hitting is all about eye-hand coordination. You can swing as fast as you want. If you can't read/see the ball, what's the point? Steroids do NOT create skill. Regardless of what Bonds took, his swing is one of the most beautiful swings in baseball. He was a good hitter, period. Steroids did NOT create him. If you believe otherwise, you probably shouldn't speak where educated people can hear you.


By your retarded logic, Ronnie Coleman should play baseball. He'd be the greatest hitter evaaaarrrrrr!

You don't make it to that level without already having great hand-eye coordination. Add superhuman strength to that and you have a home run hitter. Look at Ichiro, the guy hits better than most in the league. How often does the ball leave the park when he hits, not many. If he started juicing today, he'd reach bonds in no time.
 

_GuRu_

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PED's prevent/heal injuries quicker which is a huge benefit. Also, obviously hitting a baseball is way more involved than just strength as 01svtL pointed out, but it would be a huge benefit if all of your former routine popups left the park. PED's make good players great, which was the case with McGwire. But if the majority of players were taking them, and the pitchers hes facing were taking them, then why do we crucify McGwire?
 

01svtL

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Baseball fans do.

I'm a huge baseball fan. I don't care.

That's because, unlike MOST that jumped on the bandwagon, I am actually half-way educated on steroids (AND I actually played the sport for a long time) and the different compounds, and how they ACTUALLY affect the body. I don't go around regurgitating bullshit that I heard some other dumbass say.

My g/f is one of them. She didn't pay attention to baseball outside of the Houston Astros before the Bonds scandal. She didn't even know who Bonds was. She's a Kines major w/ quite a bit of health/science educational background. She still doesn't know 1/4 of what I know about those kinds of substances, and yet she tried to argue with me using the same BS points that everyone else is using. Say what you want. You're an idiot if you believe a foreign substance makes the player. There are homerun hitters, and there are line-drive hitters. There are way more factors involved in swinging a baseball bat than what was in the syringe that was stuck in the player's ass....
 
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