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Mohit on steroids and baseball
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    0 starsmohit | Shared With: Everyone - Feb 27 2008 | baseball, steroids, news, clemens, politics
    Justice Dept. Asked to Investigate Roger Clemens - New York Times

    (As first observed by Jon Stewart) How did even this become a partisan issue?

    Quoted: Democrats appeared to back McNamee, who stated in the Mitchell report that he injected Clemens with steroids and human growth hormone on numerous occasions between 1998 and 2001. Many Republicans appeared to side with Clemens, with one Republican calling McNamee a “liar” and a “drug pusher.”

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    1
    0 starsmohit | Shared With: Everyone - Jan 07 2008 | clemens, baseball, steroids, news
    Clemens on 60 Minutes  | The Seattle Times

    Quoted: The first question was why McNamee would lie about drug use by Clemens, but tell the truth about giving human growth hormone to the pitcher's friend, training partner, fellow Texan and longtime teammate (in New York and Houston), Andy Pettitte. Two different cases, Clemens said, adding that he was "shocked" to hear about Pettitte taking HGH, but insisting it had nothing to do with him.
    ...
    In other words, a fancy way of not giving an answer. Yes, we know they are two separate cases. But why lie about one and tell the truth about the other? Especially when McNamee faces possible jail time for lying? Clemens wouldn't touch that one. But it's a darn good question.

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    2
    0 starsmohit | Shared With: Everyone - Dec 15 2007 | alex rodriguez, baseball, steroids, mlb
    ESPN - Peeved Canseco calls Mitchell report 'laughable' - MLB

    Quoted: Prodded further about players not included, Canseco said this of Alex Rodriguez: "All I can say is the Mitchell Report is incomplete. I could not believe that his name was not in the report."

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    4
    0 starsmohit | Shared With: Everyone - Sep 26 2007 | baseball, news, sports, steroids, muscle
    Study: Steroids Could Significantly Increase Home Runs for Professional Players

    Quoted: A Tufts physicist and baseball fan will publish an article in the upcoming issue of the American Journal of Physics detailing how a small increase in muscle mass could increase the amount of home runs a professional-baseball-level player would hit by over 50 percent.

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