they know there testing big time nowadays, and these idiots are still using them. what really makes it worse, is the fact it's the first week of the season.

Latest suspensions mean nothing
April 11, 2006
Item: Major League Baseball on Tuesday announced that four minor league pitchers had been suspended 50 games each for violating baseball's drug policy. Three tested positive for performance enhancers, the other for "a drug of abuse." None of the four are on a major league club's 40-man roster.
My take: It's far from a coincidence that MLB made this announcement just a day after commissioner Bud Selig engaged in a sometimes testy exchange with media in St. Louis over steroids.
No one needs to rejoice over the announcement. Don't even try to proclaim that baseball really is on the ball when it comes to testing and enforcement. No-name minor leaguers got popped. They couldn't appeal, they didn't have the union behind them -- they were stuck, so to speak.
The true test will come when there's an open-and-shut case involving a major leaguer -- caught redhanded, no "supplement defense." If that player doesn't serve 50 as a first-time offender, fans should have zero confidence that baseball can credibly police itself.
April 11, 2006
Item: Major League Baseball on Tuesday announced that four minor league pitchers had been suspended 50 games each for violating baseball's drug policy. Three tested positive for performance enhancers, the other for "a drug of abuse." None of the four are on a major league club's 40-man roster.
My take: It's far from a coincidence that MLB made this announcement just a day after commissioner Bud Selig engaged in a sometimes testy exchange with media in St. Louis over steroids.
No one needs to rejoice over the announcement. Don't even try to proclaim that baseball really is on the ball when it comes to testing and enforcement. No-name minor leaguers got popped. They couldn't appeal, they didn't have the union behind them -- they were stuck, so to speak.
The true test will come when there's an open-and-shut case involving a major leaguer -- caught redhanded, no "supplement defense." If that player doesn't serve 50 as a first-time offender, fans should have zero confidence that baseball can credibly police itself.