…Nor his claim that half of all major leaguers (or whichever percentage he settled on) use steroids.
True, and they probably never will be validated, but he’s yet to be proven wrong, unlike McGwire and Palmeiro. Does anyone know who else he accused in his book?
I found an interesting article on Baseball Prospectus which attempts to answer the OP’s questions, plus a few more. This is normally a pay site, but they are offering free access through 08/03.
First off;
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Palmeiro faces zero chance of perjury or similar charges because, as far as proof goes, at the time of his statements he hadn’t. Because the ‘evidence’ occured after the fact doesn’t make the initial statements false.
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Palmeiro isn’t for sure a steroid user, as he tested positive simply for performance enhancing drugs. As I recall, both marijuana and meth qualify under that as well as a very far reaching group of drugs, both legal and illegal. He could have failed for as little as a bottle of Pepto (or similar generally inoccuous substance) for all we know.
That said;
Is the dead on truth. There’s not the legal evidence, but it stands that one of the players he named has failed a drug tests, while mysteriously one suffered a serious early season slump and the two most prolific? Well one is sitting out the entire season (btw, there are some fascinating rumors about Jordan’s season in baseball) and the other has had a huge drop-off in productivity?
Coincidence? Quite possibly.
I’m personally shocked, being a Rangers fan and a man that’s met Palmeiro, I thought he was above this. I believe the tests and am irate. I really believed his achievements were natural, which was precisely why they were under the ESPN radar.
And I feel like a jackass for it today.
Pot is a performance enhancing drug?
Not for baseball, but it has been suggested it helps snowboarders. The suggestion was made by some snowboarders. (Don’t I can’t cite this one, it was just some top level snowboarders half joking)
I haven’t seen any other sport where MaryJane could be considered performance enhancing.
According to some experimental data I recently made up, marijuana does not enhance performance, but it does enhance enjoyment of performance.
So indirectly then, a ballplayer can realize better performance by enhanced “love of the game.” Interesting…
It’s now been reportedthat Mr. Palmeiro tested positive for stanozolol.
Also, it appears that congress has taken interest in this.
Since this is General Questions, I’ll leave it at that. There’s a pit thread where you can offer an opinion on this story.
Yep, and it can also enhance an observer’s enjoyment of the game. xo, C.
It might for this sport
Interestingly enough, I heard a contestant in this “sport” discussing suggestions that appetite enhancing materials, e.g. cannabis, might come in handy in food eating contests. He claims that in the long run, it makes no difference. According to a guy I know, named Ernie, pot enhances just about all sensations, including, presumably, the one that you’re really full and can’t eat another bite. xo, C.
The NY Times says the drug in question is Stanazolol, AKA Winstrol or 17[symbol]b[/symbol]-Hydroxy-17-methyl-5[symbol]a[/symbol]-androstano[3,2-c]pyrazole.
The snowboarder thing is a refernce to the Canadian snowboarder who won a gold medal at the Nagano games and later lost his medal for testing positive. He then got it back. Here is more on the story.