MESA, Ariz. -- The number of positive tests for steroids in Major League
Baseball dropped to between 1 to 2 percent last season, commissioner Bud
Selig said Saturday, and he predicted the virtual elimination of the
drug from the sport this year.
The new figures, based on just under 1,200 tests, compare with 5 to 7
percent positive results in 2003, the first season that major-league
players were tested.
Selig said the test results "startled me and a lot of other people."
"I am very confident that we will effectively rid our sport of steroids
in this coming season," he said at a news conference.
The tests in 2003-04 were done under the 2002 collective bargaining
agreement adhering to a program far less stringent than the one adopted
by major league baseball and the players union this year. The new
program implemented this week includes an unannounced test of every
player, other random testing and tests in the offseason.
"I'm comfortable in telling you that we've not only dealt with our
problem, but we will finish what we started," Selig said. "There always
will be some exceptions, but I'm very comfortable with what we've done."
Bud Selig says he is confident steroids will be eliminated in the majors through testing.
(AP)
Selig also said the minor-league testing program has dropped from 11
percent or tests being positive in 2001 to 1.7 percent last season.
The commissioner emphatically refuted the notion that baseball owners
looked the other way from the steroid problem because they loved the
popularity of the home-run binge of the late 1990s. He said he had never
heard an owner, manager, player or anyone else involved in the sport
voice that feeling.
"Do I wish that I knew in 1995 or 1996 what I know today about this
after all the hours I've spent?" Selig said. "Of course I do. I would be
less than honest if I didn't say that. We're just learning a lot of
things now. But we've hired the best people we have, we've gone to
Olympic labs. And I think our programs are as consistently good as
anybody else.
"But the facts speak for themselves."
A House committee plans hearings on the use of steroids in baseball, and
Selig has been invited to testify, along with several former and current
players. Selig would not say whether he would accept the invitation.
"I don't know. We're going to monitor that whole thing. Frankly, it's
just come up," he said.
If current players are subpoenaed to testify, Selig said, "the only
thing I'm going to say is I'm very protective of players and we'll just
have to work our way through all of that."
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