Professional athletes' use of performance- enhancing drugs has led
hundreds of thousands of teenagers in the United States to turn to
steroids that can cause "serious harm" to their development, the head
of an investigation into baseball's own troubled past said Tuesday.
Former senator George Mitchell said the impact sports stars had as
role models on steroid use among the young was the most "shocking"
finding of his investigation into nearly two decades of illegal drug
use by baseball players.
"The fact that hundreds of thousands of American youngsters are
using steroids ought to be a wake-up call to every American, whether
they're sports fans or baseball fans or not," Mitchell told a
congressional hearing.
Mitchell led a months-long probe, at a cost of about 20 million
dollars, that exposed widespread use of illegal performance-enhancing
drugs in baseball since the early 1990s. The problem was widely known
by owners, managers and baseball's authorities, and Mitchell described
a "collective failure to recognize the problem as it emerged and to
deal with it early on."
Members of the House Oversight Committee criticized the league for
a "code of silence" that prevented the issue from emerging during its
peak in the last decade. Baseball banned steroids in 1991, but testing
was only agreed to by the players' union in 2002 and has since been
strengthened.
Among dozens of players implicated in Mitchell's report released
last month was Roger Clemens, whose 20-year career as a pitcher is
regarded as one of the finest in baseball's history. Clemens, who won a
record seven Cy Young awards as the best pitcher of the year, has
strongly denied he ever took steroids and will appear before Congress
in February.
But Mitchell, who among other high-profile jobs helped mediate an
end to the conflict in Northern Ireland, said the focus of action
should be on ending steroid use, rather than exposing and punishing
players that were implicated in the past.
He related his advice to the "difficult" process of releasing
prisoners in Northern Ireland that had committed "brutal criminal acts"
for what they believed were patriotic causes.
"I learned then that sometimes you have to turn the page and look
to the future," Mitchell said. "I believe that everyone involved should
be trying to bring this troubling chapter in baseball's history to a
close."
But Mitchell warned that aside from giving players a competitive
advantage, the most dangerous impact of steroid use was its role in
"encouraging" young people to follow the lead of their sports role
models.
"This goes far beyond baseball ... Baseball players are not the
only persons who are role models for young people," he said. "It's a
broad societal issue of which baseball is only a part."