03-13-2005, 04:10 AM
from FOXSports.com:
Quote:<span style='font-size:25pt;line-height:100%'>Report: Probe links McGwire to steroids</span>
FOXSports.com
Mark McGwire's name came up several times in a landmark Federal Bureau of Investigation anabolic steroids inquiry that led to 70 convictions in the early '90s, the New York Daily News is reporting.
Two steriod dealers caught in the probe told the Daily News that another dealer provided McGwire and Jose Canseco with anabolic steroids.
However, evidence against McGwire was never collected and he was not a target in the investigation.
This comes just five days before the House Government Reform Committee is scheduled to question seven current or former players and four baseball executives about steroids. McGwire is one of the players subpoenaed for the congressional hearing.
An informant told the Daily News that McGwire was injected on several occasions at a Southern California gym by a California man named Curtis Wenzlaff. A former member of that gym told the Daily News that he heard the two discuss steroids. According to informants, McGwire's regimen reportedly included injecting himself in the buttocks once every three days with two testosterone substances and weekly with another.
According to the Daily News, Wenzlaff admitted turning Canseco from a novice into an expert steroid user, but would not comment on accounts regarding McGwire.
In Juiced : Wild Times, Rampant 'Roids, Smash Hits, and How Baseball Got Big, Canseco admitted to using steroids as a player, and went as far as to point out former teammates he helped introduce to the substance. Canseco wrote that he and McGwire allegedly injected steroids together in a bathroom stall at the Oakland Coliseum.
McGwire adamently denied that he used steroids.
The congressional hearing on steroids is scheduled for March 17, but the commissioner's office has said that it will fight the subpoenas.
"I am very protective of the players, and there has to be a sense of fairness," commissioner Bud Selig said Saturday. "If I sound a bit elevated, it is for that reason. We made agreements and we are doing the things we promised to do."
Under pressure from Congress, baseball and its players agreed in January to a tougher steroid-testing program that added penalties for first-time offenders (10-day suspensions) and random, year-round tests.
"It's an evolving policy. When we went to testing, it was called weak and toothless," Selig said. "But we started at 7 percent (testing positive), now we're down to 1-2 percent. I believe while this policy isn't exactly what I want, it's the best that could be done in collective bargaining.
Selig said he has worried about steroids the past seven years, since the story about McGwire's use of androstenedione, a steroid precursor.
"The andro thing brought it to my attention and that's when this all started," Selig said.
But the problem wasn't thought widespread then, with only rumors of "a player or two" - including Canseco - using steroids.
"In 1998, when balls were flying out of the ballpark, everybody said the ball was juiced up," Selig said. "I send Sandy Alderson to Costa Rica because everybody said you better do something about the baseballs. Nobody ever said to me you better do something about the players."
Back in the '90s, Canseco denied using steroids. He now has a best-selling book in which he admits using them, and named other players he claimed did as well.
Canseco has requested immunity when he testifies, and his lawyer said the request is being considered by the Justice Department.
Curt Schilling said Friday he was willing to testify. Frank Thomas also said he planned to attend, but could testify by telephone because of an injury. McGwire, Jason Giambi, Sammy Sosa and Rafael Palmeiro haven't said whether they'll show up in Washington.