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07-04-2006, 06:55 AM
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The Lizard King
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Canseco returns, calls for MLB 'cleanup'
ABJ
7/4/06
Quote:
Canseco returns, calls for MLB 'cleanup'
JANIE McCAULEY
Associated Press
<!-- begin body-content -->CHICO, Calif. - Jose Canseco's most entertaining stuff came hours before he stepped back onto the field, when he criticized Major League Baseball and promised more significant steroids information.
His on-field performance left a lot to be desired.
Canseco returned to professional baseball with a three-strikeout showing as the designated hitter for the San Diego Surf Dawgs in their 4-3 Golden Baseball League win over the Chico Outlaws on Monday night.
On the steroids front, he got everybody's attention again - calling for a "cleanup" in Major League Baseball and suggesting baseball officials might play favorites when it comes to penalties.
"The policy sounds great, but that's not the problem," he said in a news conference five hours before first pitch. "There are major problems not with the policies but the individuals who are instituting this policy. For example, and this is theoretical, if Roger Clemens gets tested and he gets tested positive and it comes back, what do these individuals do with this policy? I think it's going to depend on a case-to-case, player-to-player basis."
Canseco, who wrote a book that helped persuade baseball to toughen its steroids policy, received a smattering of boos and cheers before the game when he was announced, then again when he stepped into the batter's box leading off the second inning.
Canseco - swinging a wooden bat for the first time in at least four years - also was hit by a pitch in a game that drew 4,501 fans for the largest crowd ever to watch a game in Nettleton Stadium.
"I don't know right now how to attack a breaking ball," he said while fireworks began exploding behind him. "The pitchers have the upper hand. It will take a week or so. I've struck out three times in the big leagues when hitting hot as ever and come back the next day and hit a home run."
He struck out swinging on four pitches leading off the second and again in the third on five pitches, getting razzed in the process.
"Juiced!" one fan hollered, a reference to the book. "That's not a big league pitcher, Jose," another man yelled. Canseco was plunked on his left side by right-hander Nick Singleton in the fifth.
The crowd clapped when he finally made contact in the seventh, fouling off a pitch moments before he struck out for the third time. Some fans even watched from the roof of an apartment complex beyond the wall in right-center.
Earlier, Canseco called Major League Baseball "the mafia" for the way it has handled the game's steroids scandal and said the sport might even hide the truth when it comes to big-name stars and positive tests.
"They're mafia, point blank, they're mafia," Canseco said. "I don't think Major League Baseball is enthused about finding out the truth. There needs to be a major cleanup in Major League Baseball. I think they are treading on very thin ice, and (commissioner) Bud Selig has to be very careful what he's doing because his job is on the line."
When contacted about Canseco's comments, baseball spokesman Pat Courtney said, "We wouldn't comment on anything he said."
One day after his 42nd birthday, Canseco noted that years of steroids use helped slow the aging process for him. He weighs 230 pounds - down significantly from his playing weight of between 255 and 260.
The former slugger - he has 462 career home runs - was back in professional baseball for the first time since finishing his 17-year major league career with the Chicago White Sox in 2001. Canseco signed with the Surf Dawgs last week for the remaining two months of the season, set to earn the league's maximum salary of $2,500 a month.
He even plans to pitch, featuring a knuckleball, and threw a bullpen session before Monday's game at the 4,100-seat ballpark on the campus of rural Chico State University, some 170 miles north of the San Francisco Bay area.
Before the game, the Outlaws gathered in the shade and watched Canseco hit about six homers during batting practice. Even concession stand workers left their posts to take a peek.
Canseco's return comes some 16 months after he attracted the attention of Congress with an autobiography, "Juiced," that accused several top players of steroid use - including fellow Cuban Rafael Palmeiro, who was suspended on Aug. 1 last season for violating baseball's new steroids policy and claimed he didn't know how the drug got in his body.
In a 2005 interview on the CBS television show "60 Minutes," Canseco also said he injected Palmeiro with steroids. Palmeiro is now out of baseball.
"The reason why I wrote this book is to fight Major League Baseball," Canseco said. "I feel one person can make a difference. I feel one person can change the world. I want Major League Baseball to know I'm not going away that easy."
Canseco accused baseball of cutting Palmeiro a deal to testify against him, saying MLB then went ahead and leaked Palmeiro's positive test out of fear that Congress would find out.
"I know what I know," he said.
Canseco is working on a movie and two more books, saying he intends to "rectify" his tarnished image.
"The movie is going to be devastating, no ifs and buts about it," he said.
Canseco said he will meet in the coming weeks with former Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell, appointed in March by Selig to head the sport's investigation into steroids.
Baseball has toughened its drug policy several times in recent years, but Canseco isn't satisfied.
"They now realize it started with me and ends with me," he said. "The policy sounds great, but that's not the problem. There are major problems not with the policies but the individuals who are instituting this policy."
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07-04-2006, 07:29 AM
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I think. Therefore, I am
Administrator
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Join Date: Jul 2004
Posts: 26,960
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Now here's a name I simply can't get enough of...
"I don't know right now how to attack a breaking ball,"
Then keep your ass retired.
__________________

"Reality is merely a framework for imagination" 9/25/05
"I am firmly convinced that Charlie Weis didn't have any idea as to how good the Buckeyes were defensively." - Brent Musburger
I'd rather be a prison whore than root for Michigan --- Long live the PCP
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07-05-2006, 07:10 AM
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The Lizard King
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Join Date: Apr 2004
Posts: 29,600
Points: 232,125.09
Bank: 15,067.92
Total Points: 247,193.01
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Dispatch
7/5/06
Quote:
NOTEBOOK
Baseball dismisses Canseco’s allegations
Wednesday, July 05, 2006
ASSOCIATED PRESS
<!--PHOTOS--><TABLE class=phototableright align=right border=0><!-- begin large ad code --><TBODY><TR><TD><TABLE align=center><TBODY></TBODY></TABLE></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
Major League Baseball yesterday took a stand against admitted steroids user Jose Canseco, calling the former slugger’s allegations that MLB might be playing favorites with some big-name players when it comes to positive drug tests "complete nonsense."
Canseco, who last played in the majors in 2001, returned to professional baseball with the independent San Diego Surf Dawgs on Monday. Before the game, he made critical comments about how baseball officials are handling the new, stricter steroids policy and said a "cleanup" in the commissioner’s office is needed.
Major League Baseball initially declined to react to Canseco’s latest diatribe, in which he called baseball the "mafia" and suggested the sport isn’t interested in knowing the truth about some star players’ use of performanceenhancing drugs. But one day later the league strongly denied Canseco’s statements.
"Complete nonsense," spokesman Rich Levin said.
"The policy sounds great, but that’s not the problem," Canseco said Monday. "There are major problems, not with the policies but the individuals who are instituting this policy. For example — and this is theoretical — if Roger Clemens gets tested and he gets tested positive …what do these individuals do with this policy? I think it’s going to depend on a case-to-case, player-to-player basis." Canseco’s return — he went 0 for 3 with three strikeouts and was hit by a pitch — comes some 16 months after he attracted the attention of Congress with his autobiography, Juiced, that accused several top players of steroid use.
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07-05-2006, 07:41 AM
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Legend
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Join Date: Aug 2005
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Watching him pitch is about the funniest thing ever. He couldn't hit the side of a barn with his knuckleball.
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07-05-2006, 08:12 AM
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I have misplaced my pants.
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Join Date: Mar 2005
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Not to say that his allegations are right or wrong, but if I were an employer of a successful company, I wouldn't re-hire a guy who'd been in the media trashing my business. But if he's still good enough to help a team win some games, I'm sure someone will sign him.
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Keep your pants off of me!!!
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07-18-2006, 07:09 AM
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The Lizard King
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Join Date: Apr 2004
Posts: 29,600
Points: 232,125.09
Bank: 15,067.92
Total Points: 247,193.01
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ABJ
7/18/06
Quote:
Canseco set to pitch in All-Star game
Associated Press
<!-- begin body-content -->CHICO, Calif. - Jose Canseco is set to make his Golden Baseball League pitching debut Tuesday night in the independent league's All-Star game.
Canseco will pitch at least one inning in the game at Chico's Nettleton Stadium and also will participate in the pregame home run derby.
Canseco, who joined the league late last month, has been added as an honorary member of the South team.
"Canseco's pitching debut will just add another element to the fun and excitement that is the All-Star game," South manager Terry Kennedy said in a statement. "Everyone will have the opportunity to see him showcase both his bat and his arm in one day. And even I'm anxious to see Jose's knuckleball."
Canseco, a former American League MVP and six-time All-Star in the majors, got off to a slow start in his comeback in the Golden Baseball League. He struck out 11 times in his first 13 at bats, but is hitting .333 with two homers and seven RBIs in his last five games for the Long Beach Armada.
Canseco has been getting his arm into pitching shape the past two weeks and could be used in regular season games later in the season.
Canseco made one big league pitching appearance, working the final inning for the Texas Rangers in a 15-1 loss to the Boston Red Sox on May 29, 1993. He walked the bases loaded and allowed three runs and two hits. He threw 12 strikes and 21 balls, most of which were far from the strike zone.
But he tore a ligament in his elbow, ending his season. He said he felt a sharp pain in his elbow on his second pitch but stayed in and threw 31 more pitches.
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07-29-2007, 05:31 PM
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My reality check bounced.
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Join Date: Oct 2004
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