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Poll: Majority of baseball fans say steroid users should be banned from game


By ROB GLOSTER

AP Sports Writer
   NEW YORK (AP)  A majority of fans say players who test positive for
steroids or other performance-enhancing drugs should be banned from baseball
and think such players should be barred from the Hall of Fame, a poll found.
   But there is strong opposition among baseball fans to erasing records held
by players who fail drug tests, according to the nationwide poll released
Tuesday by Quinnipiac University in Connecticut.
   The poll was taken Dec. 7-12, a few days after the San Francisco Chronicle
published leaked grand jury testimony in which Yankees slugger Jason Giambi
admitted long-term steroid use and seven-time MVP Barry Bonds said he
unknowingly took substances that prosecutors have identified as steroids.
   Sixty-one percent of the 865 baseball fans polled said players who test
positive should be banned from the game, while 33 percent oppose such a move.
The breakdown was fairly consistent across gender - 60 percent of men and 64
percent of women supported such sanctions.
   Fifty-two percent of those questioned said major leaguers who test positive
for steroids or other drugs should be banned from the Hall of Fame, while 42
percent said there should be no such ban.
   On the question about expunging the records of players who fail drug tests,
57 percent were opposed and 36 percent supported such a move.
   The poll also found 93 percent of fans believe the use of steroids or other
performance-enhancing drugs by baseball players is a problem, including 65
percent who call it "a major problem."
   Only 15 percent of respondents said they were "very interested" in
baseball and 33 percent said they were "somewhat interested" - about the same
level of baseball interest found in polls a decade ago.
   The poll has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3 percentage
points.
    
   On the Net:
   Quinnipiac University - http:www.quinnipiac.edu
      
Copyright 2009 by STATS LLC and The Associated Press. Any commercial use or distribution without the express written consent of STATS LLC and The Associated Press is strictly prohibited.
 
 

 
 
 
 
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