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Wednesday
Feb132008

Major League Baseball Pitcher Roger Clemens Faces House Oversight and Government Reform Committee Regarding Steriod Allegations

During this morning's House Oversight and Government Reform Committee hearing on the illegal use of steroids in Major League Baseball, all-star pitcher Roger Clemens took the mound against Congress, repeatedly denying allegations made by former trainer Brian McNamee that he indeed abused steroids.

Clemens, winner of a record seven Cy Young Award's, opened his testimony by discussing not his gaudy statistics, but instead the grueling work-out regiment and hard work he had used to achieve success. Nicknamed "The Rocket" by fans and analysts, Clemens discussed his community involvement, love for his family, and how "shortcuts were never an option" along his road to superstardom.

McNamee, a former Clemens confidant and a man the pitcher said he used to treat like "family," pressed hard with the bold accusations he made against the hurler. Acknowledging he was, "part of the problem" baseball faced during the late-1990's with steroid use, McNamee cited the fact each of the other two players he claimed to have provided with steroids, former and current New York Yankee's Chuck Knoblauch and Andy Pettite, had admitted his troubling accusations about them were true.

"I have no reason to lie, and every reason not to," said McNamee, with Clemens' legal team convinced otherwise. At one juncture in the hearing, Clemens' attorneys, citing discrepancies in McNamee's argument, actually began yelling from their seats at Chairman Henry Waxman (D-CA) in defense of Clemens. Clemens claimed he took vitamin B-12 regularly, actually at his mother's advice, while McNamee maintained he injected Clemens illegally with drugs such as winstrol, testosterone, and HGH.

The allegations, which included an affidavit of admitted steroid user Jose Canseco saying he had, "no reason to believe," that Clemens has, "ever used steroids, human growth hormone, or any other performance enhancing drugs," carry heavy legal implications for both Clemens and McNamee. If found guilty of lying under oath, either can be convicted of perjury charges, while the sheer use and distribution of illegal steroids can subject either party to legal penalties as well.

Reader Comments (2)

With this country on denial for recession, why are the tax payers paying for our elected officials to talk to the MLB players who are accused of steroid use? Let these $Billion Dollar Sports empire sort their own problems and the house committee members should go back to their tax paid job the were elected to do, not this did you or did you not business. That is sheer waste of tax payers monies.

February 15, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterDr Jaime

With this country on denial for recession, why are the tax payers paying for our elected officials to talk to the MLB players who are accused of steroid use? Let these $Billion Dollar Sports empire sort their own problems and the house committee members should go back to their tax paid job they were elected to do, and not this did you or did you not business. That is sheer waste of tax payers monies. Lots of waste. Do a simple blood draw and lets see?

February 15, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterDr Jaime

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