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The Bonds Bombshell Mar. 7: San Francisco Chronicle reporter Lance Williams elaborates on his soon-to be published book about Barry Bonds, Game of Shadows on 'Countdown' with Keith Olbermann. |
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. - Barry Bonds’ pursuit of the home run record might have been juiced after all.
According to an upcoming book written by two San Francisco Chronicle reporters, Bonds used a vast array of performance-enhancing drugs — steroids, human growth hormone, insulin — for at least five seasons beginning in 1998.
An excerpt from “Game of Shadows,” which lays out extensive details of the slugger’s alleged doping program, appears in the March 13 issue of Sports Illustrated.
“I won’t even look at it. For what? There’s no need to,” Bonds said Tuesday at Scottsdale Stadium.
Bonds returned to California on Wednesday for a custody hearing that had been scheduled for a month, but was expected back in camp later in the day. The Giants said he would not comment further.
“No, no, no, I don’t want to talk about Bonds. I’ll see you later,” San Francisco manager Felipe Alou said after the Giants’ 12-3 win over San Diego in Peoria before bolting aboard the team bus.
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“I’ve read what was reported,” Bonds’ agent, Jeff Borris, told The Associated Press. “Barry is looking forward to playing this year and the improved health of his knee, and being as productive as he’s ever been.”
In a statement printed by the San Francisco Chronicle, Borris said the book cites 'a woman who previously attempted to extort Barry for money, and who, after that failed, told Geraldo Rivera that she never saw Barry take illegal or performance-enhancing drugs, but explained that her source of knowledge supposedly came from conversations she had with him -- conversations she intended to report in her soon-to-be published (and yet to be published) book."
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The book describes how Bonds started using steroids because he was jealous of the attention paid to Mark McGwire’s home run race with Sammy Sosa in 1998, and felt he needed to bulk up significantly to compete with the St. Louis Cardinals’ slugger.
According to the book, Bonds was using two undetectable designer steroids, informally known as the cream and the clear, plus insulin, human growth hormone and other performance enhancers by 2001, when he hit 73 home runs for the Giants to break McGwire’s single-season record of 70 set in 1998.
“It wasn’t illegal,” Orioles manager Sam Perlozzo said in Florida. “The thing we all worry about is the fact that people discount the fact that you put some numbers up. When you put things like that in jeopardy and in doubt, it’s not good for the game. ... You wonder about the stats. But we don’t know how many did it. Maybe everyone did.”
Baseball did not ban performance-enhancing drugs until after the 2002 season, though there has long been suspicion that players took steroids to gain an edge.
“I didn’t even know there were that many kind of steroids,” said Cubs manager Dusty Baker, Bonds’ former skipper in San Francisco, who said he read the book excerpts. “I’ve never even seen steroids. I didn’t even know what kind of steroids are steroids other than the kinds you use to fight allergies. ... I was quite surprised with the detail that was in there.”
Bonds, a seven-time NL MVP, enters this season with 708 homers, seven shy of passing Babe Ruth and 48 from breaking Hank Aaron’s career mark. Bonds said before last season ended that he wanted to get “skinny,” but he is about the same size or slightly heavier this spring and is yet to play an exhibition game on his surgically repaired right knee. He underwent three operations last year.
Giants general manager Brian Sabean declined to address the book during Tuesday’s game, saying, “Just baseball, guys.” And Staci Slaughter, the team’s vice president of communications, cited the team’s policy of not commenting on the “legal matter.”
BALCO, the Bay Area Laboratory Co-Operative founded by Victor Conte, kept track of Bonds’ drug use in detail, with folders and calendars that chronicled everything from schedules and quantities to his testosterone levels. Much of that information was obtained by federal agents when they raided the lab in September 2003.
According to reports in The Chronicle, Bonds testified to the grand jury in late 2003 that he used a clear substance and a cream given to him by his personal trainer, Greg Anderson, who pleaded guilty in the BALCO case last July to steroid distribution and money laundering. Bonds said he didn’t know that what he was using was a steroid, the newspaper reported.
In October, Anderson was sentenced to three months in prison and three months in home confinement. Conte was among three other men who also pleaded guilty to their role in supplying steroids to elite athletes.
According to the book, Bonds used several substances in various forms — by injecting himself with a syringe, taking injections from Anderson, gulping pills, putting liquid drops under his tongue or rubbing cream on his skin. Bonds became so experienced and well-versed with the regimen that he occasionally overruled Anderson and took control of his own doping schedule, the book says.
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Baseball commissioner Bud Selig had not reviewed the material and had no comment, spokesman Rich Levin said. Selig was en route from Milwaukee to Phoenix for the World Baseball Classic.
Bonds played in only 14 games last season, all in September, following the three knee operations. He showed signs of his old self in his brief return, hitting five homers in 42 at-bats.
He is in the final season of his $90 million, five-year contract and will be eligible for free agency after the World Series, meaning his time with the Giants could be up even if he doesn’t retire. He has often said he wants to retire in San Francisco.
The Chronicle reporters, who based the book on a two-year investigation, included an extensive summary on their sources, including court documents, affidavits filed by BALCO investigators, documents written by federal agents, grand jury testimony, audio recordings and interviews with more than 200 people.
“Game of Shadows” is scheduled to be published March 27 by Gotham Books.
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