MLB's Drug
Problem
by Jonathan Leshanski
June 23, 2003
For more other/recent articles on steroids
or drugs in baseball please follow this link
It is no real secret that baseball’s drug
policy is a mockery. Like every other major sport, baseball has
a written drug policy, however unlike other sports the policy has
absolutely no teeth. There is no testing for anything other than
steroids and even that is a total joke. Unfortunately the reason
that our national pastime is lacking an effective policy is due
to the Players Union (also known as the Major League Baseball Players
Association) .
The Union has blocked all attempts that baseball
and the American public have clamored for when it comes to an effective
drug policy. Certainly they are not the only union in history to
attempt to do so, however because of the high profile of baseball
and its players - and baseball’s anti trust exemption (we’ll
be doing a piece on the Anti-Trust exemption in our What Every Fan
Should Know column in the near future), they may not be able to
block the testing forever. In fact because of the Union’s
stance on drug testing several members of Congress have suggested
legislating a drug policy.
The Major League Baseball Players Association is
concerned with only one thing today - and that is money. It is a
shame because the Players Union has done many positive things over
the years; they have fought the reserve clause and they have fought
for better conditions and to protect the health of players. In taking
their current position of blocking mandatory drug testing it seems
obvious that the health of players is no longer high on their list
of concerns; certainly it takes a back seat to making sure a player
that hits .212 is able to make five million dollars per season.
This should scare any young athlete that is trying
to get into the majors - because even if they are clean - many of
the players that they will be competing against will be using performance
enhancers - which may make them better than the young athlete that
is not using anything. This is because of the union. Unions, at
least the unions that are concerned about their members, work to
make policies that protect their members and the honor of their
profession. That is simply not true in the MLBPA - even the limited
steroid testing policy which, went into place this season, was a
battle.
Donald Fehr, the current head of the MLBPA, has
also said that he will oppose any changes - and fight against a
drug policy when it comes to over the counter performance enhancers
like Ephedra - which contributed to the death of Orioles pitcher
Steve Bechler this spring and has contributed to the deaths of a
number of other young athletes. Why? Because they are “legal”.
In fact, Fehr and the Players Union are also opposed to testing
for illegal drugs as they feel that it violates the privacy of the
athletes.
If the union refuses to change its stance and become
more receptive to drug testing it is possible that Congress will
decide to institute drug testing legislation which undoubtedly would
result in years of court battles. As it stands right now Major League
Baseball is the only one of the major sports that does not have
mandatory drug testing – they even do drug testing in the
minor leagues! So how can they drug test in the minors and not the
majors? It is because the minor league players are not eligible
for membership in the MLBPA at this point in their careers and thus
cannot be “protected” or shielded by a union that doesn’t
give a damn about its members’ health.
In addition to not having a mandatory drug testing
policy, presently baseball is the only major sport that does not
test for recreational drugs. In fact the only testing that MLB actually
does is a “survey” testing for steroids (a policy which
is only valid through the 2004 season). Under this policy players
are only allowed to be tested twice a year - once in the spring
and once during the regular season - and these tests are easy to
get around according to insiders. Even with this pitiful excuse
for testing, it is written into the policy, that a player testing
positive will receive no punishment! The only way that mandatory
and random drug testing will become a factor the way the policy
currently stands is if 5% of all major leaguers (about 60) test
positive for steroids or refuse testing (and are thus considered
as automatic positives).
However even that appears to be open to debate
and no doubt the union will attempt to twist it. They have already
done so when a certain AL Central team got together to agree that
they would all refuse the test so that the quota of 5% positives
would be met - which would force random and mandatory testing -
the union representatives came down on them and pressured them not
to do so. Eventually they caved under union pressure that they would
all be “tainted” and labeled as drug users in the future
- when in fact the courage to take that stand would have been applauded
by fans everywhere.
However, while it does seem the MLBPA is the villain
in this piece, that simply is not the whole truth. Only the clean
athletes want to see the sport cleaned up. Many big names in baseball,
including Curt Schilling, Tony Gwynn, Mark McGwire, Ken Caminiti
and others have come forward and spoken of the rampant drug use,
estimating that between 20% to 65% of athletes are using illegal
supplements or stimulants.
The truth is that everyone in baseball, with the
exception of the clean athletes, benefits from this illegal use
of supplements and stimulants. The owners get more home runs, more
records being broken and more star players, which will put fans
into the seats. The agents want huge numbers and huge seasons so
that they can negotiate bigger and longer-term contracts for the
players and make bigger commissions for themselves.
Perhaps the biggest factor however is the fans
- the average fan does not care that someone’s production
jumps 50% from one season to the next or that a player puts on 40
lbs of muscle during the offseason. They love to see 73 home runs,
300 wins and other records being shattered. Only the purists, those
who really love the game, are concerned about tainted records and
artificial numbers that are not in line with a player’s lifetime
production. The fact is that many fans simply don’t care -
they are there for the thrill. Without a cry, or a walkout of fans,
neither the players union nor management really has more than a
public relations interest in changing the way that things are done.
Until something changes, Major League Baseball,
which is trying to act without the full backing of the owners when
it comes to drugs, will not be able to test for illegal drugs, stimulants
or performance enhancers - legal or illegal - except for what is
covered with their sham of a steroid policy.
The discoveries that I made while researching this
piece really disgusted me. Perhaps legislation may be the only way
for a change to take place. The MLBPA has the power to change all
of this simply by coming up with a drug plan that would protect
their members and not allow those who are not talented enough without
supplements to make the cut and get into professional baseball.
Until then there will be many Darryl Strawberrys, Jose Cansecos,
Steve Howes, and Steve Bechlers on their conscience.
For another view on MLB's drug policy or lack
thereof click here.
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