www.iSteve.com/05FebB.htm#jose.canseco.typhoid.mary.steroids
"The Typhoid Mary of Baseball" -- The NYT writes:
"According to a report yesterday in The Daily News, Canseco contends in his book, "Juiced," that he injected [70 homer slugger Mark] McGwire with steroids in the bathroom stalls of the A's clubhouse. The two were teammates in Oakland from 1986 until Canseco was traded to Texas in 1992...Canseco had promised to name names in his book, and he did not stop with McGwire. The Daily News reported that Canseco claims to have taught [Ivan] Rodriguez, Rafael Palmeiro and Juan Gonzalez, who were teammates from his years in Texas, to use steroids."
Back         in 1993, a baseball player agent whose brother was a major-leaguer told         me that "Jose Canseco is the Typhoid Mary of baseball,"         because when he'd show up on a team, soon his new teammates started to         inflate like him.
       
        You may recall that Rafael Palmeiro came up with the Chicago Cubs in         1986, but was traded to Texas after 1988 when rookie Mark Grace emerged         as the Cub's first baseman of the future. Grace enjoyed a fine         old-fashioned career, hitting .303 with a career high of 17 home runs.         Palmeiro, however, turned into a modern-style monster in Texas, hitting         47 homers in two separate seasons, and now has 551 for his career, 30         more than Ted Williams and 226 more than Joe DiMaggio, all without         anybody ever thinking Palmeiro was a great player.
       
        On the other hand, all three of the         Texas Rangers Canseco named were good players before Canseco arrived, so         I'm not convinced. Maybe they would have developed without him. But I am         suspicious.
       
        There's an interesting political angle: In last year's State of the         Union Address, President Bush used his bully pulpit to denounce steroid         use in sports. Bush, however, was the co-managing director of the Texas         Rangers in 1992 when they acquired Canseco. Bush's partners didn't trust         him enough to give him substantive power in running the team, using him         as a front man. But, Bush claims, he did have responsibility for signing         off on all trades, so he apparently approved the acquisition of Canseco,         even though Canseco had been notorious as a steroid user since at least         the 1988 post-season when Fenway Park fans showered him with chants of         "Ster-oid! Ster-oid" and he responded by striking a Mr.         Universe pose in the outfield. (The details on Bush and Canseco are in         my "Out of       the Park: Baseball & Steroids" article in the April         12, 2004 American Conservative.)         
 
 
 
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