
Steroids in Sports and Baseball
The story of steroid use in sports began just before the World Weightlifting
Championships of 1954. The Soviets had made their Olympic debut in Helsinki in
1952, and made quite an impact, but nothing compared to the show they put on in
1954. That year, the Soviets easily dominated most of the weight classes. As the
story goes, John Ziegler (team physician for the United States) questioned the
soviet team's doctor after the medals were given out, and the soviet doctor said
that his team had been receiving testosterone injections. That, in all
probability, was the first time anyone had ever used anabolic steroids to
enhance performance in an athletic event. According to some unconfirmed sources,
testosterone preparations were used by Germany's Olympic team in 1936 for the
Berlin Olympics. At that time, there were rumours that an Olympic medal winner
had previously used oral Testosterone preparations, but the benefit to be had
from them (due to the technology at the time regarding oral testosterone) would
have been minor. In the case of the Soviets, however, rumours of discarded
syringes in their dressing rooms made it clear that they were not using oral
steroids, they were using something different. And everyone wanted to know what
it was.
That wasn't, however, the first time anabolic performance enhancement had
been attempted. As far back as the original Olympic Games in ancient Greece,
athletes ingested various herbs and foods with the hopes of improving their
performance. The big winner in the 480 B.C. Olympic Games said he ate nothing
but meat for 10 months prior to the Games. Now we know that meat is especially
high in B vitamins and Creatine, both of which can enhance performance. Early
attempts to increase Testosterone were documented as early as 776 BC and again,
by Olympic athletes´ ingested sheep's testicles, which they knew to be a source
of Testosterone production (3). Although it might seem extreme to us now, to eat
meat for ten straight months (or to ingest sheep testicles), this was a small
price to pay for the prize money that was offered back then& up to 1,200 days
pay for winning an event was common. There were no participation medals; they
did not compete for the love of the game, to give it their best shot, or even
for pride. They competed for money and prestige, end of story (1). And that is
why they sought out performance enhancers.
If that story sounds familiar, like perhaps one you've heard on TV or in
magazines concerning modern-day steroid use in sports, it should. Athletes´
today- especially professional athletes- have very lucrative contracts and
sponsorship deals, and steroids are known to enhance performance, reduce and
repair injuries, and lengthen careers. So it should be no surprise to most
people that when Dr.Ziegler returned from the World Weightlifting Championships,
he immediately began researching testosterone and trying to develop something
better for his Athletes.
What Dr. Ziegler developed, with the help of the Ciba pharmaceutical company
was called "Methandrostenolone" or Dianabol. This was the creation of the first
anabolic steroid that wasn't simply testosterone. That was late in 1956. By the
time the early 1960s rolled around, Ziegler's weightlifters were dominating
American weightlifting. And since then, many different steroids, each with their
own different set of characteristics, have been developed.
By the late 1960´s the East Germans had also entered the fray and were giving
steroids to their athletes as part of a state sponsored program to bolster
national pride by winning Olympic Gold Medals. In 1968, Dr. Manfred Hoeppner,
East Germany's Chief Medical Officer, wrote and submitted a report to the
government in which he recommended the total collective administration of
steroids to the entire East German athletes (2). In the couple of decades that
followed after this report, the East Germans´ presence was felt at every major
world wide sporting event. From the Olympics to World Championships, they took
home both medals as well as world records.
Of course, there have been other documented instances of athletes taking
various drugs and other substances in an attempt to enhance their performance.
Thomas Hicks, an American marathoner in the 1904 Olympics, had to be revived
after he drank Brandy lased with cocaine and strychnine. He won the gold medal,
although I believe the Brandy/Cocaine/Strychnine cocktail never really took off
in popularity among his fellow athletes. His fellow runners, the sprinters
attempted to use nitroglycerine a couple of decades later, to dilate (expand)
their coronary arteries; they later switched to experimenting with Benzidrine,
an amphetamine.
Many of such compounds had been used, but none are as powerful or provided
such rapid increases in strength and powerful as anabolic steroids. For this
reason, after its invention by Dr.Ziegler, Dianabol was quickly made available
to anyone looking for an extra edge. It helped many bodybuilders, weightlifters,
football players, and Olympic athletes train harder, longer, and more
efficiently. As all steroids can do, it enhanced protein synthesis and allowed
new muscle to be built at a rate that was much more rapid than would otherwise
be possible. And that increased muscle power and strength translated into
financial rewards for the athletes who were taking them.
If you were an athlete looking to take your career farther, Dianabol was
going to be an indespensible part of your dietary intake. At this point, the
"steroid arms-race" was in full swing. Athletes all over the world wanted to
know where to get them and how to use them, and countries were scrambling to
develop new steroids and protocols for using them. Then, oddly, in 1968 there
was an official complaint about steroids made by the World Health Organization.
This complaint wasn´t made by sports authorities, but by the World Health
Organization. Steroids were being over produced by the major pharmaceutical
firms, and were subsequently shipped to certain third world countries, where
doctors would receive a kickback for prescribing large amounts of them. Kenya
and Jamaica were the main countries where this was happening, and they
(predictably) did very well for themselves at the Olympics that year.
At this time in the United States, professional sports were gaining
prominence and athletes began to be able to support themselves by just playing
their sport. Notably, at this time, there were no documented reports of athletes
using steroids in sports other than Olympic competition. Nonetheless, at this
time, a ban on Anabolic steroids was issued by the International Olympic
Council, and in the coming decades, most professional sports organizations would
follow suit. The original ban on anabolic steroids was enacted for ethical and
moral concerns, not safety (as is often thought). Shortly after the first ban on
performance enhancers came the first athlete caught breaking that ban. In the
1972, an American swimmer named Rick De Mont was found to be using a newly
banned substance- ephedrine. At that time, ephedrine was an approved medication
for asthma, and you guessed it- Mr. De Mont was an asthmatic with a prescription
for it. Two years prior to that first the 1972 Olympics, Arnold Schwarzenegger
won his first of seven Mr. Olympia titles, reportedly with the aid of Dr.
Ziegler's little blue Dianabol pills.
Steroid use in the Olympics went on, for the next couple of decades, in a
game of Cat and Mouse between the athletes and the International Olympic
Committee. For the most part, the athletes were very successful in avoiding
positive drug tests. The East Germans developed several novel compounds to avoid
detection, and were only caught when word leaked somehow. For the most part, the
Russians and Americans were also very successful at this. Professional
bodybuilding also marched onwards with competitors taking ever-increasing
amounts of steroids and other drugs, without fear of testing positive.
By the 1990´s, Anabolic Steroids had been absorbed into society, and their
use had penetrated every possible sport from the professional ranks down to the
High-School level. There were the occasional scandals here and there, but
nothing really captured the general public's attention for very long. In 1987
the National Football League introduced it's anti-steroid policy, and Major
League Baseball was left as the most major sports organization in the world
which still had no such policy.
Steroids in High School Sports
Steroids in high-school have become an increasingly hot topic in both the
media as well as at various levels of the government. This particular topic, of
course is going to be at the forefront of many high-school athletes as well as
their parents, coaches, and teachers. At this juncture, I think it's important
that I be crystal clear about my position on steroid use by high-school
students/athletes and minors under the age of 18 in general. I do not endorse
nor condone the use of any illegal substance by minors. However, I also feel it
to be absurd to carry on allowing the campaign of misinformation on anabolic
steroid use to be allowed to continue. I've personally been out of high-school
for exactly a decade, and before I began writing about performance-enhancement
full time, I worked with at-risk youths in a high-school. I believe this gives
me a unique perspective to provide information from, as well as a certain degree
of sensitivity to the current climate regarding this issue.
The first thing that I'm going to tell you is that "scare tactics" don't
work. Telling a high-school kid that steroids will kill you is silly; especially
when he can turn on the television and look at ESPN and see Bill Romanowski
setting NFL records, or Barry Bonds and Jason Giambi breaking home-run records.
Scare-tactics and misinformation have failed miserably to stem the tide of
anabolic steroid use by high-school students. My position therefore is that
education and truth are the best ways to deal with the issue of steroids in high
school sports.
First, let´s see where misinformation has gotten us, with regards to stopping
high school students from taking steroids. Steroid "education" in schools
started becoming widespread in the mid 1980. A quick look at the literature from
this time shows that the position taken by the educational community was that
steroids do not enhance athletic performance, and they carry with them the great
probability of permanent health damage. I´m not really sure where to begin my
comments on those particular positions, and still keep this article G-rated.
So let's review the facts.
In 1988, a study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association
examined Anabolic Steroid use patterns among the male adolescents. In this
particular study, overall participation rate on a school-wide basis was 68.7%
and on an individual basis was approximately half (just over 50%). The
participants in this survey were 12th-grade male students in 46 high schools
across the nation who completed a questionnaire which asked them several
questions concerning their current or previous use of Anabolic Steroids. The
results indicated that 6.6% of 12th grade male students use or have used AS and
that over two thirds of the users were 16 years of age or younger when they did
their first cycle (5).
The results of a 1990 survey of 2113 high school students show that
Ninety-four (4.4%) of 2113 students admitted using anabolic steroids. When that
is categorized further by gender, we find that 67 (6.5%) of 1028 males and 27
(2.5%) of 1085 females were users of steroids. Predictably, athletes had a
statistically significant greater use of steroids (79 [5.5%] of 1436 subjects)
than did non-athletes (15 [2.4%] of 636 subjects) (6). Still, the survey shows a
total of roughly 4% of the surveyed high school population had used steroids.
Now, let's fast forward a couple of years to examine a survey by the Center
for Disease Control and Prevention. According to that survey, steroid use among
high school students more than doubled between 1991 and 2003. Slightly over 6%
of 15,000 students surveyed admitted trying steroid pills or injections. Huh?
Wait and in 1988, 6% of the students in the survey had done steroids. Yet, in
2003 the number was still the same, though it had "doubled since 1991" according
to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention. At this time, it should be
noted that fewer than 4% of the nation's high schools were testing for steroids,
according to the National Federation of State High School Associations´ survey
of athletic directors.
Are you confused yet? It seems that the rates of steroid use is holding
relatively steady at between 4 and 6%, yet we're being told that it's an
epidemic. So what's the real story about steroids in high school?
In 2005, if we look at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Youth
Risk Behavior Surveillance, 6.1% of students from grades 9 through 12 had taken
anabolic steroids (7). Once again, we're seeing about 6% or so of high school
students are using anabolic steroids. Sorry, but that's still basically the same
rate as the previous two decades. Is this a "mounting problem" as many in the
media would have us believe? Hardly. In fact, it's holding steady.
So where is the media getting their information? Well, probably not from
scientific journals or reliable sources for statistics. In fact, anecdotal
evidence is frequently used in news reports, and that type of evidence typically
greatly over estimates the widespread usage of anabolic steroids among athletes
and often claims reach as high as 20-90%. On the other hand, scientific studies
show a trend towards indicating that usage is actually rare and generally no
higher than 6% (8). And, to look further into the hard scientific research
instead of the soft anecdotal evidence, there is strong indications that suggest
that anabolic steroid usage actually declines progressively from high school to
college and beyond(8).
Should high school students be using anabolic steroids? No, definitely not.
Is this the problem the media would have us believe it is? Again: no, definitely
not. In fact, some estimates for 2004 even suggest that only 3.4% of 12th
graders have used steroids (9). Let's put that number in perspective, shall we?
According to that same source, 76.8% of 12th graders have drank alcohol in
their, and the rates of use for most other drugs by high school students
(Marijuana, Cocaine, Ecstasy, etc...) are significantly higher than they are for
steroid use. I don't know if that eases the minds of most parents, but I think
it ought to give some kind of perspective on exactly where the "steroid
epidemic" ranks in importance.
Still for most parents, most memorable moment in the Congressional hearings
on steroids was the testimony when the committee's chairman, Rep. Tom Davis (R.,
Va.) claimed that there were in attendance "the parents of kids who have used
steroids and committed suicide." Later, The New York Times published a story on
a student who killed himself, Efrain Marrero, whose family said that his
stopping anabolic steroid use provides a viable explanation for his suicide. The
New York Times calls this "persuasive anecdotal evidence." Dr. Jack Darkes, who
is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Psychology as well as the
Director of Interventions, Alcohol and Substance Use Research Institute at the
University of South Florida disagrees with the notion that steroids can be
blamed for such instances, and instead cautions us to try to ascribe the tragic
ending of a young life to just one factor. I would like to echo his sentiments
and say that to attempt to overstate the issue of steroids in high school to
only one factor, or overstate it's importance is equally dangerous. Education at
the high school level needs to be based in science and reason, and not simply be
reactionary and emotional displays set into motion by the current media frenzy
of attention to the issue. The first step is to educate the parents, coaches,
and teachers with solid medically based and unbiased information, then to
present it to adolescents through the high school education system they are
enrolled in. Put simply, you wouldn't let your children learn table manners from
television, so why let them learn about steroids and other drugs from there?
Recent research strongly indicates that a prominent media outlet (a major
magazine or television show, for example) can build an agenda for the entire
media and thereby influence policy changes as far reaching as the national level
of government (10). So if the general feeling we get from the media is that
steroids are a rising problem and that steroid abuse is becoming more common in
high schools yet the hard scientific date suggests otherwise and who are
we to trust? I think the answer is clear & personally, I would put my faith in
science and scientific studies before the media. Unfortunately, it would appear
that the former is not strongly influencing government policy, while the latter
is (10). And that all started with steroids in baseball.
Steroids in Baseball

(Sports Illustrated, June 2002, as told by Ken Caminiti)
Major league baseball was the last major sports organization in the United
States to implement a comprehensive drug testing policy. This all started with a
bottle of a nutritional supplement seen in Mark McGwire´s locker. The bottle
contained Androstendione, a prohormone, or a compound which can convert into
another one inside the body. In this particular case, the compound in question
converts to Testosterone once in the body. Unfortunately, at this time, McGwire
was en route to breaking a home-run record that had been standing for decades.
MGwire retired shortly after breaking that record, but the story of steroids in
baseball and the Major League Baseball (ML
organization went ahead at full
speed. Just a few short years later, Ken Caminiti revealed to Sports Illustrated
that he used anabolic steroids, and that he estimated roughly fifty percent of
the players in the league were using them also. This admission opened the
floodgates to the media to begin their full scale assault on MLB. Jose Canseco,
in a book published during the height of the steroids in baseball media
coverage, estimated that 85% of all players in MLB used steroids, and also
admitted using them. Remember the difference between what has been found in
scientific studies vs. anecdotal statistics? This is a prime example of one such
difference. The players can't even agree on a percentage, and they're in the
locker-rooms!
Although Caminiti´s story was the earliest major media admission of steroid
use by a recently retired former MVP in baseball's professional ranks, it was
one of the most influential. The following is a chart illustrating media
attention to steroids in baseball for the weeks preceding and following the
Sports Illustrated piece on Caminiti. Week fourteen is when the piece was
published. You can see that prior to that, only ten pieces were published in the
mainstream media. In the same time (weeks-wise), you can see that hundreds of
articles were put out after Caminiti admission:

The most famous story in the steroids in sports is that of Jason Giambi and
Barry Bonds. Both of those players were suspected of using anabolic steroids
when the BALCO scandal was exposed. Giambi, for his part, told a U.S. grand jury
that he used a duo of undetectable steroids known respectively as "the cream"
and "the clear," both of which he received from personal trainer Greg Anderson
during the 2003 season. Bonds, on the other hand claimed that his trainer told
him the substances were the nutritional supplement flaxseed oil and a
pain-relieving balm for his arthritis.
There were also claims that a transcript of Bonds´ entire testimony was
leaked to the press, and that according to a transcript of Bonds´ Dec. 4, 2003,
testimony, he admitted the following were used by him: "the cream," "the clear,"
human growth hormone, Depo-Testosterone, insulin and a drug for female
infertility that can be used to mask steroid use."
Bonds´ attorney, Michael Rains, said the leak of the testimony was simply
engineered to discredit Mr. Bonds. However, it's important to remember that at
the time they were not banned by MLB.
So did all this media attention hurt baseball? The answer is a resounding
"no". Baseball sales figures and attendance were in a slump before McGwire was
en route to his home-run record, and they've been climbing ever since. But are
all the additional home runs a result of steroid use? Well, it's easy to say we
need to put asterisks on every record set during the "steroid era" of baseball,
but that would give too much credit to steroids alone. Of course training
methods and nutrition are part of the puzzle, but the other piece is probably
not as obvious. In the mid-´90s starting in the American League and in the late
´90s starting in the National League, home runs began to become more and more
common.
Although steroids are often blamed, the construction of more "homer-friendly"
ballparks also has something to do with it, no doubt. Coors Field, a recent
addition to the MLB stable of fields has become the most prolific run-scoring
park in the history of MLB. Enron Field was also built (reincarnated into the
more media friendly "Minute Maid Park"
, actually has a home-run friendly left
field line that was (and still may be) a clear violation of major league rules.
The Milwaukee Brewers, the Pittsburgh Pirates and Texas Rangers have all also
built very homerun-friendly fields in recent years, as have the Arizona
Diamondbacks. For their part, the Cardinals, Orioles, and White Sox have pulled
in the distance from home-plate to their outfield fence. Need I also add that
the strike zone has become much more beneficial to hitters since the era of Ted
Williams? Still, the questions remain, about steroids in major league baseball.
Do major league baseball players use steroids? Of course they do. Can we say
that steroids are the reason for the inflated home-run statistics of recent
years? Of course not.
With Multi-Million dollar contracts on the line every season, the only fact
that we can be sure of is that steroids are being used in baseball, and they
will continue to be used for as long as players can get away with it. Congress
recently chimed in and pressured MLB into instituting a comprehensive testing
policy for their athletes, but steroid use in baseball is unlikely to decline
considerably as a result of it.
Steroids in Football
Steroid policy in football and the NFL as we know it began in 1987. But to
understand the use of steroids in football, first we need to take a look at the
emerging trends in the high school and collegiate ranks. So what's going on in
high school? Well, if we look at an examination of the heights and weights of
members of the annual Parade Magazine's High School All-American Football Teams
from 1963-1971, we see no significant changes in the Body Mass Index of these
elite high-school athletes. Now, if we take another look and examine those same
players´ heights and weights but this time we compare 1972-1989, we see a clear
trend towards an increased pattern in Body Mass Index (11). These are
interesting results, to say the least. If we take a look at an elite collegiate
program such as Michigan State University, we see this trend again. In 1975,
their average player weighed 213lbs, and by 2005 that weight had jumped to
236lbs (12).
With regards to football, it would seem that current educational efforts are
not working well, either. At the high school level education about steroids was
studied on six different. Two football teams received a lecture on steroids and
a four-page handout, two of them were given just the handout, and two teams were
controls (and didn't receive any education on steroids). Also, at this level of
football, the incidence of self-report of current steroid use was 1.1%. After
the education was given to the athletes, focusing of the adverse effects
possible with anabolic steroid use, no differences in their attitudes toward the
use of anabolic steroids occurred as compared to controls, at all (13). So
that's the starting point we have to look at anabolic use in professional
football. Education, in its current form isn´t changing the attitudes of
high-school players, and at the elite level of high-school and college, the
players are getting significantly bigger. So what does the landscape of
professional football look like? In a story that is very similar to its roots in
high school and collegiate football, NFL linemen are weighing well over 300lbs
on average today. Roughly 25 years ago, they weighed over fifty pounds less, on
average (13).
The most famous story of steroid use in the NFL is that of Lyle Alzado. Seven
years after having a successful career in the NFL, in 1992, Alzado died from
brain lymphoma, a very rare form of brain cancer. He was 43 that year, but in
the years preceding it, Alzado became an often used symbol of the dangers of
steroid abuse. There is absolutely no medical link between steroids and brain
lymphoma, and there is absolutely no reason for Alzado to believe his condition
was related to steroid use.
The story of Bill Romanowski is probably the next most influential one
concerning steroids in football. Although Bill Romanowski wasn´t indicted in the
BALCO scandal, he later wrote a book, in which he admits that Victor Conte
introduced him to several performance enhancing compounds, notably anabolic
steroids (15).
Although he was a very good linebacker before he used steroids, people often
attribute his tackling ability to them. He is probably most famous for his
non-playing related antics, however. He spit in J.J. Stokes´ face, broke
somebody's finger at the bottom of a pile up, kicked a downed player in the head
several times in one incident, broke a quarterback's jaw with an illegal helmet
to helmet hit, fought former boxer Charles Haley in training camp, often speared
wide receivers illegally, broke another players´ ocular cavity, and was always
involved in various shoving matches and on field altercations. Unfortunately,
this has been attributed, post-facto, to his use of anabolic steroids.
Of course, football players use steroids, and of course this occurs at the
high-school, collegiate, and professional levels. It´s a fact of the game that a
very skilled but small player will usually get beaten by a very skilled but
considerably larger player.
And once again, as long as there is prestige and money to be earned from
playing football, there will be steroids in it.
Steroids in the Olympics
Anabolic steroid use in athletics, in all probability, began with the 1952
Olympics, as noted earlier in this article. Although not chronologically
correct, I'm going to also finish this piece with the most famous case of sports
doping in the world. Of course, I'm talking about the man who was considered the
fastest man in the world: Ben Johnson. After breaking the world sprinting record
in the 1988 Seoul Olympic Games, he tested positive for Winstrol (Stanozolol).
For anyone who has never heard his coach tell the story, Charlie Francis has
provided ample evidence for the test being somewhat unreliable (3). Briefly
states, the accepted drug clearance time for Winstrol at that time was +/- three
days for the oral form and +/- 14 days for the injectable. Ben had used the
compound 28 days prior to the race, and the parent compound was still found.
This is especially odd, since the parent compound only lasts for 45 minutes
after administration. The testers, therefore, must be making the claim that Ben
ingested it just prior to the actual race. Both he and his coach, Mr. Francis,
denied this. In fact, it was later discovered that someone as lean as Johnson
may have even been clear in less than 3 days! Some oral steroids at that time (Anavar,
or Oxandrolone) couldn't even be found on tests at that time.
So the test remains very suspect, although Ben Johnson was suspended and
stripped of his Olympic Gold medal. He probably suffered the worst fate of all
the people who have been caught using steroids either at the Olympics or
otherwise.
So where does that leave us? Well certainly, the world of sports has embraced
the use of steroids, or at least the athletes have... the use of steroids in
sports is certainly visible but not as widespread as thought. It is not the
problem that it is often made out to be, and it is not a problem that is easily
defined or to put a number on. Statistically, it is a very elusive topic, and
sources often present conflicting data. But one thing remains true, regardless
of statistics, Congressional hearings, or admissions of guilt. Although some
athletes still compete for the love of the game, prestige often accompanies
success. And today, just as two millennia ago, athletes often find the
opportunity to compete for both prestige as well as money. And that is why they
sought out performance enhancers in the ancient Olympic Games, and that's why
athletes are using steroids in sports today.
By Anthony Roberts
References:
- Wm. Blake Tyrrell, "The Smell of Sweat: Greek Athletics, Olympics, and
Culture," Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers, Wauconda. 2004.
- "Hormonal Doping and Androgenization of Athletes: " Franke et. al
- "A Brief History of Drugs in Sport" by Charlie Francis
- "Speed Trap" by Charlie Francis
- JAMA 1988 Dec 16;260(23):3441-5.
- Am J Dis Child. 1990 Jan;144(1):99-103.
- J Sch Nurs. 2005 Dec;21(6):333-9.
- J Strength Cond Res. 2004 Nov;18(4):908-17.
- Monitoring the Future [MTF], n.d
- Journalism. 5(1). 51-68, 2004.
- Percept Mot Skills. 1993 Apr;76(2):379-83.
- (Michigan State University Dept. of Athletics)
- J Adolesc Health Care. 1990 May;11(3):210-4.
- (National Football League Statistics)
- "Romo My Life on the Edge: Living Dreams and Slaying Dragons."by Bill
Romanowski et al. William Morrow Publishing co. 2005.
George Stallone,
Nutrition expert, competitive bodybuilder and author of many widely acclaimed
bodybuilding and steroid e-books.
http://www.hellaspharmacy.info