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Sport: Putting Baseball to the Test Ueberroth wants drug checkups
Everybody under Peter Ueberroth's power has been ordered to the specimen jar to prove that no one in baseball gets a kick from cocaine--with the possible exception of the players. By all reports, enough of them are using coke to interest grand juries and alarm the commissioner. But since drug testing of major leaguers, as negotiated by their union, is a largely voluntary matter, Ueberroth is cracking down on the bat boys, secretaries, office clerks, scouts, managers (Pete Rose included?), owners--and commissioners--in a gesture that is undeniably noble, probably futile and more than faintly Olympian. Sentimental waves that start in sport and extend to the country must be considered his specialty.
"My intention is to see to it that baseball rids itself of drugs," he says simply. "If, by example, we assist any other part of society because of our visibility, that's a secondary benefit. I'm not on some crusade." Keeping the emphasis on help rather than punishment, he is hopeful the Players Association will come around to concurring that baseball's voluntary drug program has proved insufficient, though early returns from the rank and file indicate that ballplayers are as loath as anyone else to swallow truth serum at the workplace. St. Louis Second Baseman and Player Representative Tom Herr says, "Part of me resents the fact that I could be subjected to testing," though he also admits, "another part of me says that maybe it's the only way to stop the abuse going on."
While Ueberroth believes that "the huge majority of players are just as clean as they can be," he knows that the shadow of drug abuse is so pervasive in athletics that it has become one of the first theories for every slump. "If I was a major league baseball player, I'd want to take the test," he says, "to remove any doubt. One minute three or four times a year would not be the end of the world." The role that cocaine played in the Tulane University basketball team's recent gambling scandal made an impression on Ueberroth. "We're not going to have a Tulane in baseball," he vows.
All the same, baseball is braced for a disgrace of its own, more trauma on the order of the cocaine-related jail terms served by four former Kansas City teammates last year. Whether players or their suppliers are the direct targets of the new investigation, reports that a federal grand jury in Pittsburgh is about to hand down several embarrassing indictments helped time Ueberroth's announcement last week. "Accelerated it," using his phrase. For four months, athletes as eminent as the Mets' Keith Hernandez, the Yankees' Dale Berra, the Orioles' Lee Lacy and the Expos' Tim Raines have been trooping to the witness stand in Pittsburgh, setting the city to whispering about drug sales transacted right in the clubhouse. If a player is implicated in any crime, immunity from prosecution may not protect him from the commissioner. The crowd of fans now staking out the moral high ground may thin out a little if the issue comes down to a home star forced to sit out the pennant race.
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