The game of baseball was under close scrutiny after Mark McGwire made a belated confession of steroid use. The confession was marked with crocodile tears and disclaimers.
Though it may not be enough to give a new hope to the die-hard fans, faces of many have been saved from further embarrassment as the confession puts an end to the baseball’s era of performance-enhancing drugs to offer a new start for the game.
From Bostonherald.com:
That’s pretty much what Bud Selig said after the man who wouldn’t talk about the past to Congress finally spoke about it to Bob Costas. On the day of McGwire’s mea culpa, Selig said in a statement that in 2010, the use of steroids and amphetamines in baseball is “virtually nonexistent, as our testing results have shown.”
Two things: Either the commissioner of Major League Baseball pays no attention to the nonstop cat-and-mouse game still taking place between the International Olympic Committee and its world-class athletes, or he’s back to his old car-selling ways again.
If he ever really left them.
Otherwise, he would not have followed with this: “The so-called steroid era — a reference that is resented by the many players who played in that era and never touched the substances — is clearly a thing of the past, and Mark’s admission today is another step in the right direction.”
The steroid era might be a thing of the past in baseball. But performance-enhancing drugs are an ever-evolving industry, as the IOC and its testing agents long ago discovered. Simply stated, the cycle goes as follows: You design a testing program to detect all known performance-enhancing drugs. They design a new drug that escapes that detection. After a while, you get wise, develop even more encompassing detection. They take your test, and build a new PED that avoids that detection.
Selig remarked that the use of steroids and amphetamines in the game of baseball is virtually nonexistent now, as suggested by test results.

