Selig says drug-testing program working

Commissioner: 'Steroid use has been minimized; amphetamines, we're doing OK'

? Bud Selig defended baseball’s drug-testing program Tuesday and insisted the toughened policy was working, and later touched on recent scandals set off by Barry Bonds, Jose Canseco and Jason Grimsley.

“I really think steroid use has been minimized,” the commissioner said. “Amphetamines, we’re doing OK.”

Several hours before the All-Star game, Selig spoke on a variety of subjects with members of the Baseball Writers Association of America.

Yankee Stadium is a strong candidate to host the 2008 All-Star game in what is expected to be its final season, he hinted.

Selig said it was worth studying whether All-Star aces should be prohibited from pitching the Sunday before the event. He also frowned on Manny Ramirez skipping this year’s showcase – the Boston slugger backed out, citing a sore right knee.

“If you get voted onto the team, it’s a privilege. You ought to be here,” Selig said.

A year after Rafael Palmeiro tested positive for a banned substance and suspicion ran rampant, only one player has been penalized under Major League Baseball’s stricter steroid rules – New York Mets minor leaguer Yusaku Iriki. He was suspended 50 games; last season, he would have been penalized 10 days.

“You don’t hear about it as much this year,” All-Star reliever Derrick Turnbow of Milwaukee said Monday. “Guys aren’t really talking about it.”

In 2003, Turnbow was the first major leaguer linked to steroids when he flunked a drug test at a U.S. Olympic training center. The players’ union said Turnbow had used androstenedione while the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency said it was a steroid.

“It was a black eye for the sport, what we went through,” said Toronto manager John Gibbons, a coach on the AL All-Star team. “You heard it everywhere. It was nonstop.”

This is the first year that amphetamines are banned. A first-time offender is sent to counseling, but his name is not made public. Selig declined to provide numbers, but said of the policy, “It’s working.”

“I’m happy where we are with the drug-testing program,” he said.

Selig was aware that some critics complain baseball should have reacted sooner to its steroid problems. He said he had no concrete evidence back then that there was trouble.

“I can’t deal with gossip,” he said. Looking back, he said, “I wouldn’t do anything different than I did.”

Selig said there was nothing new on the probe by former Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell into steroids. There’s no timetable for his report.

“He’s very independent. I don’t hear from him,” Selig said.

While Mitchell investigates, a grand jury in San Francisco is looking into whether Bonds perjured himself when he testified to another grand jury in 2003 that he never knowingly took steroids or other banned performance-enhancing drugs.

Selig would not speculate on those court proceedings. Bonds is only 35 home runs behind Hank Aaron’s career record of 755.

“That’s gone on a long time. I’m not going to guess anymore,” Selig said. “I’m saddened by the whole thing. I’m not making any judgments.”

In June, Arizona pitcher Grimsley was suspended 50 games less than a week after federal agents raided his home during an investigation into performance-enhancing drugs. He was penalized based on his alleged possession, admitted use and intended use of human growth hormone.

“There is no test for HGH,” Selig said. Referring to Grimsley’s case, he added, “We need to stay ahead of the curve.”

Canseco, a former MVP and admitted steroids user, recently called baseball the “mafia” and said the sport played favorites with its drug tests. An MLB spokesman called the allegations “complete nonsense” and Selig took – by his own admission – a “sarcastic” tone in dismissing Canseco’s claims.