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Posts Tagged ‘steroids’

Manny & Ortiz connected to 2003 PED’s

July 30th, 2009

So today the times broke the story that Manny & Papai were part of the 104 that tested positive in 2003 PED’s along with Sosa, Segui, Arod ect.. These names keep filtering out and now two of my beloved Red Sox are on the list.

You know how you make this a secondary issue? Trade for Hallady & Victor Martinez.
Nrom NY Times

Manny Ramirez and David Ortiz, the sluggers who propelled the Boston Red Sox to end an 86-year World Series championship drought and to capture another title three years later, were among the roughly 100 Major League Baseball players to test positive for performance-enhancing drugs in 2003, according to lawyers with knowledge of the results.
Skip to next Some of baseball’s most cherished storylines of the past decade have been tainted by performance-enhancing drugs, including the accomplishments of record-setting home run hitters and dominating pitchers. Now, players with Boston’s championship teams of 2004 and 2007 have also been linked to doping.

Baseball first tested for steroids in 2003, and the results from that season were supposed to remain anonymous. But for reasons that have never been made clear, the results were never destroyed and the first batch of positives has come to be known among fans and people in baseball as “the list.” The information was later seized by federal agents investigating the distribution of performance-enhancing drugs to professional athletes, and the test results remain the subject of litigation between the baseball players union and the government.

Five others have been tied to positive tests from that year: Barry Bonds, Alex Rodriguez, Sammy Sosa, Jason Grimsley and David Segui. Bonds, baseball’s career home runs leader, was not on the original list, although federal agents seized his 2003 sample and had it retested. Those results showed the presence of steroids, according to court documents.

The information about Ramirez and Ortiz emerged through interviews with multiple lawyers and others connected to the pending litigation. The lawyers spoke anonymously because the testing information is under seal by a court order. The lawyers did not identify which drugs were detected.

Unlike Ramirez, who recently served a 50-game suspension for violating baseball’s drug policy, Ortiz had not previously been linked to performance-enhancing substances.

Scott Boras, the agent for Ramirez, did not respond to telephone and e-mail messages seeking comment.

Asked about the 2003 drug test on Thursday in Boston, Ortiz shrugged. “I’m not talking about that anymore,” he said. “I have no comment.”

The union has argued that the government illegally seized the 2003 test results, and judges at various levels of the federal court system have weighed whether the government can keep them. The government hopes to question every player on the list to determine where the drugs came from. An appeals court is deliberating the matter, and the losing side is likely to appeal to the United States Supreme Court.

A spokesman for the United States attorney’s office for the Northern District of California, which seized the tests, declined to comment on Thursday. Michael Weiner, the general counsel for the players union, also declined to comment.

One by one, the names of elite players tied to performance-enhancing drugs have surfaced this year. In February, it was Rodriguez and Bonds. In May, it was Ramirez — for the first time. In June, it was Sosa.

Rodriguez had been viewed by some as a clean player who could eventually overtake the career home run record established by Bonds, who had been linked to possible drug use through the federal investigation. Rodriguez subsequently admitted that he used a performance-enhancing substance from 2001 to 2003.

The Times reported in June that Sosa was among those who tested positive in 2003, the first time he had been publicly tied to performance-enhancing drugs. Sosa became a national figure with the Chicago Cubs in 1998, when he and Mark McGwire of the St. Louis Cardinals engaged in a celebrated race to overtake Roger Maris’s single-season home run record of 61. McGwire’s image suffered tremendously when, at a Congressional hearing in 2005, he refused to answer questions about steroid use.

By 2003, Ramirez had long since established himself as one of baseball’s best hitters. Ortiz, however, was far lesser known. In 2002, the Minnesota Twinseffectively cut him after failing to trade him. He signed a bargain contract with the Red Sox and began the 2003 season as a backup.

Ortiz quickly blossomed, setting new personal highs in home runs (31) and runs batted in (101). He surpassed those numbers in each of the next four seasons.

Ramirez, with his dreadlocks and quirky behavior, and Ortiz, with his gregarious personality and portly build, formed a dynamic tandem on and off the field. They seemed to feed off each other — not to mention demoralize opponents — by hitting back-to-back in the heart of the lineup.

In 2004, they helped the Red Sox overcome a 3-0 series deficit against the Yankeesin the American League Championship Series. The Red Sox then swept the St. Louis Cardinals in the World Series to end decades of heartbreak in Boston. Ortiz had a game-winning home run and a game-winning hit against the Yankees and was named the most valuable player of that series. Ramirez was named the World Series M.V.P. after going 7 for 17 at the plate with a home run.

Three years after winning that first title, Ramirez and Ortiz returned Boston to another World Series, where they defeated the Colorado Rockies.

The pairing was split last season when the Red Sox traded Ramirez to the Los Angeles Dodgers after team officials grew concerned that he was not playing hard in response to a contract dispute. In Los Angeles, Ramirez took off again, becoming popular among the fans and leading the Dodgers to the playoffs.

But Ramirez’s hero status in Los Angeles took a hit in May when he was suspended after baseball officials learned that he had been prescribed a fertility drug often used by bodybuilders after they stopped using steroids. When Ramirez was suspended, he issued a statement that appeared to maneuver around his 2003 test results.

“I do want to say one other thing,” Ramirez said. “I’ve taken and passed about 15 drug tests over the past five seasons.”

That five-year period extended back to 2004, which excludes the 2003 test.

Since returning from his suspension, Ramirez has been widely accepted by the home fans. In 48 games this season, he has compiled a .327 average and has hit 11 home runs.

Ortiz, meanwhile, has been in a sharp decline. He had an operation on his wrist last year and missed nearly a third of the season. He started this year in a slump and did not hit his first home run until a month and a half into the season. Since June 1, however, he has hit 12 more home runs.

In 2007, Ortiz said that he used to buy a protein shake in the Dominican Republic when he was younger and did not know if it contained a performance-enhancing drug.

“I don’t do that anymore because they don’t have the approval for that here, so I know that, so I’m off buying things at the GNC back in the Dominican Republic,” Ortiz told The Boston Herald. He added: “I don’t know if I drank something in my youth, not knowing it.”

In February, he said that players who tested positive for steroids should be suspended for an entire season — about 100 games more than the current policy requires for a first offense.

David Waldstein contributing reporting from Boston.

 

MLB, Red Sox, Yankees , , ,

Boggs: A-Roid is Unamerican

June 22nd, 2009

Thank god for Wade Boggs. I mean I hate the guy, he left the Sox and went to the Yankees, but he went for money and a championship so I guess I do not really HATE him. But he has been on a tour de force in Boston doing Coors Light promotions, and has been reportedly getting hammered at every event. But the other night during a Q & A he said anyone that does steroids is “unamericana and apple pie” (or something like that), which literally makes no sense, but one can assume he was talking about A-ROID, or A-FAUD, or A-I-GET-BENCHED-FOR-FATIGUE-AND-GO-OUT-WITH-KATE-HUDON-TILL-3AM.. Whatever name you want to call him is fine by me.

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SAMMY SOSA DID STEROIDS? No way.

June 17th, 2009

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When do reports of people not passing drug tests in 2003 stop being a story?  You mean Sammy Sosa didn’t pass a steroids test?  In other obvisous non-news, Hurricane pulled a hangman last night.

I think it should only be news when someone MORE groundbreaking doesn’t pass the test.  So after A-Rod, we can’t go back to Sammy Sosa.  We would have to hear about Pujos or Jeter or someone more interesting.

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Fine. This Made Me Laugh

June 11th, 2009

While I think that Red Sox fans are the most obnoxious in all of sports, this “You Do Steroids” chant while A-Rod was up in the 9th last night was pretty hilarious.

Hurricane’s take:

I salute you 36,784 Fenway faithful for standing on your feet and letting the world know who does steroids! A-ROID does Steroids! Also if you don’t think I was giving Ortiz a Standing ovation when he popped out in the 8th you are mistaken. Boston loves Papi and Papi loves us. We are all in this slump together and we will all fight out of it.. Side note, 0-3, no K’s and 2 walks.. I will take it..

MLB, Red Sox v. Yankees, Yankees , , ,

Doug Mientkiewicz Defends A-Rod HS Steroid Rumors

May 1st, 2009

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I am so sick of this Selena Roberts chick. She broke the story about A-Rod and that was fine. Now she is just straight putting him down in any way she can.  Just because she was validated with the original accusation she thinks she can make up any friggin rumor she wants and its fine. The latest, or at least one of them, is that A-Rod started doing steroids all the way back in High School. From what I hear, her source is some teacher who saw A-Rod lift more and grow from one year to another. THAT’S YOUR SOURCE? Well Doug Mientkiewicz (seriously, is there a more ridiculous spelling pronunciation of a name?), who played High School ball with A-Rod vehemently defends A-Rod

 

“From my perspective, it would be 99.9% impossible for us not to know,” said Mientkiewicz, who was a year ahead of Rodriguez in school.

Mientkiewicz lashed out at Roberts, who broke the story that Rodriguez flunked a drug test in 2003 while playing for the Texas Rangers. The report forced Rodriguez to admit in February that he took banned substances from 2001 to ‘03.

Rodriguez put on 25 pounds of muscle between his sophomore and junior years in high school, according to the book.

“You’re basically accusing every kid that’s gone through puberty that they’re on steroids too, huh?” Mientkiewicz said. “He gained a couple of inches height-wise too, if I remember right. . . . I knew what he looked like in ninth grade. He was skinny. Who isn’t in ninth grade? He was very dedicated back then, he worked harder than anyone else.”

 

I am not an A-Rod apologist or anything… he screwed up and he deserves all the bad press, but these rumors are just getting old.  Hopefully the coverage on the Yankees will turn back to baseball soon, but I doubt it.

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A-Rod Interview

February 10th, 2009

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Besides the fact that A-Rod said he didn’t know what he was taking I think that his apology was heart felt and honest.  I would like to believe he has been clean since 2003, but who the hell knows right?  He got tested for the WBC so we can at least know he has been clean since then (with 2007 being the best year of his career).  I am over this A-Rod steroids thing.  There is no way he can be booed any harder than he is normally so hopefully it is just business as usual.

Just a warning to every other team in baseball, A-Rod is going to have a MONSTER year this year.  45/145/.330.  Done.

Can we get back to baseball now?

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Biased A-ROD Reaction

February 9th, 2009

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As you all know, there was an SI.com report on Saturday that A-Rod tested positive for steroids in 2003. This is the one person I never thought was on steroids… and have said the statement “I know for a fact that A-Rod never did steroids”. So this was an obvious surprise to me.  Here are some random thoughts on this:

  • Selena Roberts came to A-Rod on Thursday and the story broke on Saturday.  He had two days to come out ahead of this story.  he did nothing.  Selena asked him for a comments and he just brushed her off and told her to talk to the union.  There are two ways to handle this situation, like Clemens/Bonds or like Pettite/Giambi.  The only way this can somewhat go away is if he comes out and says something..  Tell your side of the story A-Rod, silence is certainly NOT golden right now.
  • How pissed in Joe Torre right now?  He book only got two weeks of “coverage” now everything MLB is all about A-Rod.  Torre got what he deserves.  I wonder if this affects in NY Times #1 Best Seller chances.
  • Most importantly, what does this do for the Yankees season?  There is ALWAYS something with A-Rod, so I am not sure if the extra coverage will bother the team.  The only problem I see is if this affects A-Rod’s performance.  Hopefully he has a kick ass “F YOU!” season.
  • What I think A-Rod should do is come out and tell the truth.  Then make public all the tests he took in the past four years (I heard he took tests the past four years, but who actually knows if that is true).  Finally, take a public drug test every six months for the rest of his career.  The Union wouldn’t let this happen, which is bullshit, but this is the only way that he can still even be considered one of the best of all time.

Unfortunately, I feel like A-Rod is going to shut himself off to the public until spring training and just let people say anything and everything without contesting it.  We all know how bad A-Rod is at managing his public image so we should expect nothing else.

Yankees 2009… feel the EXCITEMENT!

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Pitchers and Catchers

February 8th, 2009

4 Days…Baseball and Steroids

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