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Report: On tape, Bonds implicated for steroids
ESPN.com ^ | 10-16-04

Posted on 10/16/2004 2:28:01 PM PDT by truthandlife

Barry Bonds' personal trainer says in a secretly recorded conversation that the record-breaking slugger used an undetectable performance-enhancing drug during the 2003 season, according to the San Francisco Chronicle.

In an article published Saturday, the Chronicle reports that Greg Anderson, Bonds' boyhood friend and a defendant in the BALCO steroids conspiracy case, provided Bonds with steroids that could be taken the day of a test and still not be detected.

The Chronicle reports that it received the recording from a source familiar with Anderson who asked not to be indentified, and that two people who know Anderson listened to the tapes and said the voice is his.

The paper does not identify the other voices on the recording or report who made the recording and the circumstances under which it was made.

Anderson's attorney, J. Tony Serra, said Friday that Anderson "categorically denies" providing Bonds with illegal substances. After listening to portions of the recording, Serra said he couldn't identify the voice as Anderson's.

Bonds' attorney, Michael Rains, said "this is as simply another below-the-belt bash of Barry Bonds, which as I understand it is supposedly the product of what has to be an illegally recorded telephone conversation supposedly between Greg Anderson and an anonymous criminal."

Asked for comment Friday by the Chronicle about Bonds' alleged use of banned drugs, Rob Manfred, a Major League Baseball executive vice president, said, "... Whether or not he was using an undetectable performance-enhancing substance, I and the commissioner will have no comment."

In the recording, the person said to be Anderson says that not only is the substance provided Bonds undetectable, but that through contacts in the testing labs, he would know when Bonds was going to be tested, a claim that Manfred refuted.

During the 9-minute, 19-second recording, there are background conversations that can't be made out, and some of Anderson's comments are not audible, according to the Chronicle. However, the newspaper reports that many of Anderson's comments make it clear that the subject of the conversation is Bonds.

Bonds has also been a subject of interest to federal investigators probing the BALCO lab in Burlingame, Calif., and international sports-doping, the Chronicle notes. On the recording, Anderson indicates that the drug he was giving Bonds was the same as the drug being used by unnamed Olympians who had passed multiple drug tests.

Anderson, BALCO founder Victor Conte and two other men were indicted in February on steroid conspiracy charges for allegedly distributing drugs that included a supposedly undetectable steroid called "the clear" to stars of baseball, the National Football League and Olympic track and field. They have pleaded not guilty.


TOPICS: Front Page News
KEYWORDS: bonds; mlb; nosurprise; steroids
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To: truthandlife
*Barry Bonds
21 posted on 10/16/2004 6:04:04 PM PDT by montag813
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To: Jeff Chandler
I wonder what Ruth could have done with modern training techniques. Of course, Ruth never would have spent 10 minutes in a gym. It would have cut into his social life.

Imagine any player today winning MVP, the Home run title and the Cy Young award all in the same year. Babe Ruth would have done it TWICE.

No stupid records by Aaron or Bonds will ever eclipse the Babe. He was the greatest of all.

22 posted on 10/16/2004 6:05:56 PM PDT by montag813
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To: truthandlife

This makes Bonds, Sosa's and other suspected players' records meaningless.


23 posted on 10/16/2004 6:08:17 PM PDT by Dante3
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To: boop

well, these days you dont really have much non-steroid athletes competiting with steroid athletes. its steroid athletes vs steroid athletes to get into the majors. im not sure how far back steroid use has been so popular but id guess its been pretty big since the 80's.


24 posted on 10/17/2004 12:27:55 PM PDT by CaptainAwesome2
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