This article from NYTimes.com 
has been sent to you by [EMAIL PROTECTED]

/-------------------- advertisement -----------------------\

FOR YOUR CONSIDERATION: IN AMERICA - IN THEATRES NOVEMBER 26

Fox Searchlight Pictures proudly presents IN AMERICA
directed by Academy Award(R) Nominee Jim Sheridan (My Left
Foot and In The Name of the Father). IN AMERICA stars Samantha
Morton, Paddy Considine and Djimon Hounsou. For more info:
http://www.foxsearchlight.com/inamerica

\----------------------------------------------------------/

Results of Steroid Testing Spur Baseball to Set Tougher Rules

November 14, 2003
 By JACK CURRY and JERE LONGMAN 



 

PHOENIX, Nov. 13 - Major League Baseball, which has labored
for several seasons under suspicion that some of its star
players were using steroids, said Thursday that in the
first year of testing for steroids more than 5 percent of
players' tests were positive. As a result, stricter testing
standards will go into effect next year. 

>From 5 to 7 percent of the 1,438 random, anonymous tests of
players on major league teams' 40-man rosters this year
were positive, baseball said, triggering testing for the
2004 season that could result in penalties against players.
The players would also be identified publicly. 

Though the number of positive tests ranged from 70 to 100,
it was unclear how many players tested positive. Of the
1,438 tests, 240 were repeat tests, and so some players may
have tested positive twice. 

The steroid issue has intensified for baseball since two
former Most Valuable Players, Ken Caminiti and Jose
Canseco, said in 2002 that they used them and that many
other players did, too. More muscle-bound players and an
explosion in performance by hitters added to the suspicion
that some players might be using performance-enhancing
drugs. 

Baseball's team owners began a push for testing, but the
players' union was reluctant before agreeing to the program
last year, when a new labor contract was signed. 

"Hopefully, this will, over time, allow us to completely
eradicate the use of performance enhancement substances in
baseball," Commissioner Bud Selig said in a statement. 

But Dr. Gary I. Wadler, a professor of medicine at New York
University who is an expert on performance-enhancing drugs,
noted that if the 70 to 100 positive tests were grouped
together, they would exceed the number of players on the
40-man roster of any of baseball's 30 teams. This seems to
indicate that steroid use was widespread, he said, calling
into question the legitimacy of baseball players' recent
achievements. 

"That's really a very sorry day for baseball," Dr. Wadler
said. 

As part of the labor agreement concluded last year, which
included the ban on steroids, baseball and the players'
union agreed to the anonymous testing for 2003. Because the
positive test results exceeded the 5 percent threshold, the
agreement calls for all players to undergo stricter testing
starting on March 2, 2004. If the number had been less than
5 percent, the same survey testing would have been repeated
next year. 

Until agreeing to testing last year, the players union had
been opposed to it on the grounds that it infringed on
players' privacy rights. 

The new testing plan will be in effect for 2004 and 2005.
Unless the combined positive rate is less than 2.5 percent
in those years, it will also be in place in 2006. 

The announcement comes at a time when two of baseball's
biggest stars, Barry Bonds and Jason Giambi, have been
called to testify before a federal grand jury in California
in the investigation of a company suspected of making
steroids. Bonds and Giambi have said they received only
nutritional supplements from the company. 

Beginning next season, the first time a player tests
positive he will receive treatment and education about the
substance that was abused and be subject to further
testing. A second positive will result in the player's
being identified publicly and include a 15-day suspension
or up to a $10,000 fine. The penalties escalate to a
one-year suspension or up to a $100,000 fine for the fifth
positive test. Suspensions will be without pay. 

"If it's something that will ultimately make the problem go
away or speculation of a problem go away, then what's wrong
with that?" said Mets pitcher Tom Glavine, the National
Leaguers' representative during the negotiations last year.


Players had no specific knowledge of when they would be
tested, but they knew since the collective bargaining
agreement was reached on Sept. 30, 2002, that tests would
be administered at some point this season. Billy Beane, the
general manager of the Oakland Athletics, said it probably
surprised him that players tested positive despite having
at least four months' advance knowledge that testing was
imminent. 

"It's good that there's been some attention to it," he
said. "Both sides have agreed there should be attention
paid. This is the result of it." 

The tests were conducted in two phases, with 1,198 players
on the 40-man major league rosters being tested at
unscheduled times beginning in spring training and
continuing throughout the season. In addition, 240 players
were randomly selected and tested a second time. Baseball
wanted all players to think there was a chance they would
be tested a second time and hoped the testing itself would
deter steroid use. 

"A positive rate of 5 percent is hardly the sign that you
have rampant use of anything," said Rob Manfred, baseball's
executive vice president for labor relations. "From our
perspective, it's still a problem. We'd like it to be at
zero." 

Gene Orza, the associate general counsel of the players'
union, calculated that between 42 and 83 players had tested
positive. When asked about the fact that players knew the
tests were coming and some still tested positive, Mr. Orza
said: "We should assume 83 would have been 790 without the
program? That's a pretty good program." 

Mr. Orza said the results were "much, much less than anyone
would have expected" and indicated that survey testing was
successful in trying to stem steroid use. "It showed that
the leading players in the game, the 25-man rosters,
steroid use is hardly rampant," he said. 

That 5 to 7 percent of players tested positive hardly means
that only 5 to 7 percent use banned substances, scientists
said. Baseball's survey testing program did not meet the
standards of what would be considered meaningful screening,
like the year-round, random, unannounced testing used by
sports affiliated with the Olympics, Dr. Wadler said. 

Scientists also noted that players could have used steroids
in the off-season, when they knew they would not be tested,
and stopped several weeks before spring training, when
testing began. This could have provided them with the
muscle-building effects of steroids while allowing time for
detectable amounts of the drug to leave their systems,
scientists said. 

Given that baseball players were told to expect to be
tested beginning in spring training, failing a drug test
amounted to flunking an IQ test, Dr. Wadler said. At the
Olympics, 1 to 2 percent of drug screens are expected to
turn up positive. That 5 to 7 percent of baseball players
tested positive may indicate a lack of sophistication about
drug use compared with track and field and professional
football, said Dr. Charles Yesalis, a Penn State expert on
steroids. 

"There must be a lot of stupid baseball players," he said.


The National Football League, the National Basketball
Association and the National Collegiate Athletic
Association test for steroids and other banned substances;
the National Hockey League does not. For substances other
than steroids, baseball tests a player only if doctors say
there is cause. 

When baseball's drug testing was first announced, it was
widely criticized by drug-testing experts as being too
lenient. But Mr. Manfred said recently that the
implementation of this form of testing would give baseball
"the greatest drug testing program in all of sports." 

Mr. Manfred would not disclose which steroids were found to
be more prevalent. Tetrahydrogestrinone, or THG, a steroid
that was not detectable until recently, has been added to
the list of Schedule B steroids that Mr. Manfred said were
banned. Side effects of steroids include liver tumors, high
blood pressure and reproductive problems. 

Dick Pound, a Montreal lawyer who is chairman of the World
Anti-Doping Agency, said he thought baseball's steroid use
would have been higher than the tests indicated. 

"I would have thought it would have been more use than
that, but even by baseball's own tally, even with their
heads buried in the sand, they have got to acknowledge
there's a drug problem and go to another level of testing,"
he said. 

Dr. Wadler said baseball should contract out its
drug-testing program to an independent agency, such as the
World Anti-Doping Agency. 

While baseball would like the number of positive tests to
be zero, Mr. Manfred said he thought scientists were
overstating the magnitude of the problem. "I think our
program stacks up well with what is actually done in the
Olympics as opposed to what they like to depict their
program as," he said. 

http://www.nytimes.com/2003/11/14/sports/baseball/14BASE.html?ex=1069819324&ei=1&en=59a1c3ec57a7ae4d


---------------------------------

Get Home Delivery of The New York Times Newspaper. Imagine
reading The New York Times any time & anywhere you like!
Leisurely catch up on events & expand your horizons. Enjoy
now for 50% off Home Delivery! Click here:

http://www.nytimes.com/ads/nytcirc/index.html



HOW TO ADVERTISE
---------------------------------
For information on advertising in e-mail newsletters 
or other creative advertising opportunities with The 
New York Times on the Web, please contact
[EMAIL PROTECTED] or visit our online media 
kit at http://www.nytimes.com/adinfo

For general information about NYTimes.com, write to 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]  

Copyright 2003 The New York Times Company

Reply via email to