Pettitte will corroborate HGH accusation against Clemens

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  • mofome
    SBR Posting Legend
    • 12-19-07
    • 13003

    #1
    Pettitte will corroborate HGH accusation against Clemens


    McNamee's lawyer says Pettitte will corroborate HGH accusation against Clemens


    By RONALD BLUM, and
    January 29, 2008


    HOWARD FENDRICH

    AP Sports Writers


    WASHINGTON (AP) -- A lawyer for Andy Pettitte's former personal trainer said Tuesday he believes the pitcher will tell Congress he discussed human growth hormone with Roger Clemens between the 2001 and 2002 seasons.

    The lawyer, Earl Ward, said Pettitte talked about HGH with trainer Brian McNamee following a conversation with Clemens, who has denied that he used HGH or steroids. McNamee worked with both Clemens and Pettitte.

    "We're hopeful based on Andy's reputation that he will corroborate Brian's statements with regard to Roger," Ward said in a telephone interview.

    Pettitte's meeting with a congressional committee investigating drug use in baseball was postponed until Monday. He originally was slated to appear for a deposition or transcribed interview Wednesday but the date was changed Tuesday by the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee.

    McNamee said in last month's Mitchell Report that he injected Clemens at least 16 times with steroids or HGH in 1998, 2000 and 2001. He said he injected Pettitte two to four times with HGH.

    Pettitte admitted two days after the Mitchell Report was released that he tried HGH for two days in 2002 -- before it was banned by players and owners.

    Ward said the discussion he was referring to occurred at Clemens' house.

    "Based on what we know, there was a situation where Andy was speaking to Roger in Brian's presence, then Andy came over to Brian and essentially said, 'Why didn't you tell me about this stuff?' He referred to HGH," Ward said. "Brian discouraged him and then several months later, when he (Pettitte) got injured, he came back and asked Brian about it, and that's when Brian injected him. We believe that based on the fact that Andy came to Brian and asked him about HGH, it was Roger who told Andy about HGH and that's why he asked Brian about it."

    Richard Emery, another lawyer for McNamee, said his client and Pettitte also discussed steroids use by Clemens.

    "Pettitte is certainly going to tell the truth and if he tells the truth everything will be fine," Emery said.

    "There are a number of conversations where Pettitte and Brian talked about Clemens' use. I think there is everything to believe Pettitte is not a liar."

    Jay Reisinger, Pettitte's lawyer, would not discuss what Pettitte would say.

    "He hasn't testified yet, and I'm not going to comment on what he's going to testify about," Reisinger said.

    Lanny Breuer, Clemens' new lawyer, said the seven-time Cy Young Award winner stood by his denials.

    "Roger Clemens' remarkable success as a pitcher has everything to do with his extraordinary work ethic and his innate abilities, and nothing to do with HGH or steroids," Breuer said in a statement. "Let me be clear: Roger Clemens never took HGH and he never took steroids."

    Ward's claims about the discussion were first reported by The New York Times on its Web site.

    The delay of Pettitte's deposition or transcribed interview was the latest switch in the schedule of meetings between witnesses and staff before the Feb. 13 hearing.

    "Just a mutually agreeable postponement," said Keith Ausbrook, Republican general counsel for the committee. "It give us a little more time to prepare and gives him a little more time to prepare."

    Also asked to appear at next month's hearing are Clemens, McNamee, former Yankees second baseman Chuck Knoblauch, and former New York Mets clubhouse employee Kirk Radomski.

    "Mr. Pettitte is cooperating voluntarily with the committee, and we look forward to his testimony on Monday," panel chairman Henry Waxman and ranking Republican Tom Davis said in a joint statement. "We appreciate Mr. Pettitte's willingness to assist the committee."

    Knoblauch now is scheduled for Friday and would be the first of the five Feb. 13 witnesses to provide a deposition or transcribed interview. He agreed to appear after a subpoena was issued.

    Clemens is to follow Feb. 5, with McNamee down for Feb. 7, and Radomski on Feb. 12 -- pending further changes to a repeatedly shuffled schedule.

    Letters sent by Waxman and Davis to Clemens, Pettitte and Knoblauch on Jan. 16, requesting their appearances both at the hearing and a pre-hearing meeting, said: "The committee asks that you provide testimony about allegations in Senator George Mitchell's report ... that you and other Major League Baseball players used performance enhancing drugs during your professional baseball career."

    New York Yankees' Chuck Knoblauch watches his game-tying eighth-inning homer against the Atlanta Braves in game 3 of the World Series in New York in this Oct. 26, 1999 file photo. Knoblauch is being subpoenaed by a congressional committee investigating steroids in baseball after he failed to respond to an invitation to give a deposition on Feb. 13, 2008.
    AP - Jan 22, 5:01 pm EST
    More Photos
    Clemens, Pettitte and Knoblauch were among more than 80 players named in the Mitchell Report.

    McNamee told Mitchell he acquired HGH from Radomski for Knoblauch in 2001, and that he injected the player with it. Knoblauch's major league career ended in 2002.

    Radomski pleaded guilty in April to federal felony charges of distributing steroids and laundering money, and is scheduled to be sentenced Feb. 8.

    The 35-year-old Pettitte has a 201-113 major league record and won four World Series championships with the Yankees. He also helped his hometown Houston Astros reach their first World Series.

    Pettitte returned to the Yankees last season and went 15-9. This offseason, he put off retirement and agreed to a $16 million, one-year contract to play for the Yankees next season.

    Blum reported from New York, Fendrich from Washington.
  • Willie Bee
    SBR Posting Legend
    • 02-14-06
    • 15726

    #2
    Why is this story still in the news
    Comment
    • jjgold
      SBR Aristocracy
      • 07-20-05
      • 388179

      #3
      Clemens is done forever in baseball

      I love it
      Comment
      • Willie Bee
        SBR Posting Legend
        • 02-14-06
        • 15726

        #4
        I'm sure you're like a lot of people who just don't like Clemens, JJ. Whether or not he used steroids or other PEDs isn't really the issue, just as long as he's publicly humiliated into Pariahville.

        And yet, here's another player who claims the Mitchell Report is wrong about him, and it barely even made a trickle on the news wires this week...Clemens and Cust aren't the only ones denying their involvement, and barely anything about one veteran player who McNamee initially named and was eventually cleared by the Mitchell Report has been said.

        http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/news/story?id=3217415
        Oakland Athletics designated hitter Jack Cust seems puzzled by two particular aspects of his inclusion in former Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell's report on doping in Major League Baseball.

        One, that he was accused of using steroids. And two, that he apparently was assigned a locker beside former minor league teammate Larry Bigbie -- the source behind Cust winding up in the report.

        In his first public remarks, Cust told Bay Area media that he has never used performance-enhancing substances.

        "No. No. Not even one game," he said Saturday.

        Cust then challenged the information Bigbie gave in a conversation with Mitchell's investigators.

        "At the beginning of the 2003 season, Cust and Larry Bigbie were both playing for Baltimore's Class AAA affiliate in Ottawa," the report, released Dec. 14, read. "Bigbie's locker was next to Cust's. Cust eventually asked Bigbie if he had ever tried steroids. Bigbie acknowledged he had, and Cust said that he, too, had tried steroids.

        "Cust told Bigbie that he had a source who could procure anything he wanted, but Bigbie informed him he already had a friend who could supply him," according to the report.

        Speaking Saturday at the A's annual FanFest, Cust said the circumstances surrounding his inclusion in the report were "unfair," adding he doesn't remember speaking with Bigbie about steroids and that the two were not locker neighbors while playing for Ottawa.

        "He was a teammate of mine five years ago and we haven't talked since," Cust said. "I don't remember any conversations about [steroids]. He might have misinterpreted something I said, but I don't remember anything.

        "I read the report, and he said he had the locker next to me. I didn't have a locker next to him. I don't know how something like that gets misinterpreted, but I haven't talked to him in five years. ... A lot of people say the same thing, that it seems weird my name is in there when there were other cases where there was a lot more [evidence] accrued."

        Cust said he followed the players' union's advice and did not speak to Mitchell's investigators.

        "I had nothing to hide," Cust said, "but they advised me not to talk, because then they try to get something on other guys you've played with."

        Cust, a veteran minor leaguer, provided Oakland with a great source of power last season with 26 home runs and 82 RBIs in 395 at-bats.

        Cust, 29, joined the A's last May in a trade from San Diego. Prior to carving out the full-time role at DH, he had 144 at-bats in the majors -- and only three with the Padres in 2006.

        "The people who have played with me know I work harder than anyone else," Cust said Saturday, "and people who've known me my whole life know I've had power my whole career. Hopefully, people stand by me. People have opinions but it's important to me to make this a positive thing and be a positive influence."

        A's general manager Billy Beane told the San Francisco Chronicle that he spoke to Cust about the Mitchell report this winter and that he was satisfied with his player's answers.
        Comment
        • mofome
          SBR Posting Legend
          • 12-19-07
          • 13003

          #5
          Originally posted by jjgold
          Clemens is done forever in baseball

          I love it


          as do i

          Comment
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