Independent report details results of MLB’s drug-testing
TOWER GROVE — An outcome of the Mitchell Report, which was published a year ago during the offseason, was that Major League Baseball and the players’ union agreed to release publicly a review of the drug-testing program. The audit does not include names, just facts and figures, but it offers a snapshot of how a sport once described as “infested” with performance-enhancing drugs is addressing the issue.
The report, issued by the Independent Program Administrator Dr. Bryan W. Smith and emailed to baseball writers around the country, was released this afternoon by the MLBPA, and it contains a breakdown of the past year in testing. All of the numbers are based on the 40-man roster for teams.
Quoting from the report:
- 3,486 tests were performed from the beginning of the 2007-2008 offseason to the conclusion of the 2008 playoffs.
- 19 of the tests were positive for a banned substance.
- Five of those 19 were for a performance-enhancing substance, including two for Androstenedione, the substance we all know as Andro and grabbed headlines as far back as 1998. J.C. Romero and Sergio Mitre were just penalized for positive tests that showed Andro.
- 14 of the 19 tests were positive for stimulants.
- A total of 114 exemptions were granted for “therapeutic use”.
- Of those 114, 106 were for Attention Deficit Disorder (or ADHD).
- One was for post-concussion syndrome.
The report, as a whole, isn’t earth-shattering. But the line there about ADD (or ADHD) as a diagnosis is worth noting. Of the 14 tests that showed the use of a stimulant, eight identified Adderall as that stimulant. A year ago 103 exemptions were issued for ADD, according to the information submitted to Congress. Only a few hours old and this fact has already drawn criticism, as detailed in the report from The Associated Press. To AP baseball writer Ronald Blum, World Anti-Doping Agency official Dr. Gary Wadler said:
“This is incredible. This is quite spectacular. There seems to be an epidemic of ADD in major league baseball. … I’ve been in private practice for a lot of years. I can count on one hand the number of individuals that have ADD. To say that close to 10 percent of major league baseball players have attention deficit disorder is crying out of an explanation. It is to me as an internist so off the map of my own experience.”
A Major League Baseball official told the AP that the percentage could reasonably be different for professional athletes and that there is “better access” to medical care for pro baseball players. But this is not the first time the ADD diagnosis has been alleged to be a shield or a loophole in the testing. Newsweek opened last spring training with an enlightening article that explored the ADD question. It is provocatively headlined “Baseball’s Ritalin Addiction”.
The AP story linked above has more reaction to and details about the report.
-30-


Derrick Goold said he was going to Mizzou for capital-J journalism, but after growing up in the Time Zone Baseball Forgot he was really drawn to MU sitting between two major-league cities. Goold joined the Post-Dispatch in 2001 after working for The Times-Picayune and Rocky Mountain News, covering sports from LSU to NHL and every level of baseball in between.
Baseball will always leave a loophole for players to juice. It’s good for the ratings and frankly, that’s all they care about. It’s a shame congress let them get away with this, I guess money will by anything.
buy, sorry
WHO EVEN CARES AS LONG AS THE LEAGUE MAKES MONEY THAT IS ALL THAY CARE ABOUT WHAT ASHAME THAT MLB HAS EVEN COME TO THIS BUT IT IS WHAT IT IS I GUESS THIS WHOLE STERIOD ERA JUST MAKES YOU APPRECIATE GUYS LIKE ROGER MARIS ~STAN THE MAN MUSIAL ~ROBERTO CLEMENTE~ AND OTHERS A WHOLE LOT MORE THAN THE PLAYERS OF THE STERIOD ERA .
The rates of ADHD in children is much higher than those suggested by Dr. Wadler, and children do grow up. Major League Baseball players may be a small subset of adults who are, in part, self selected for an athletic career due, in part to high energy levels. If major league baseball players tend to have more energy than the general public, it may be true that a subset of those players, larger than in the general public, has ADHD.
In general, however, I believe the diagnosis is to easily given to children.
No wonder those guys can’t pick up the 3rd base coach’s signs. If catchers have to go past three fingers the pitchers will be in big trouble too. But, has anyone done a study of the umpires?! Maybe they really are as stupid as we think?
One was for post-concussion syndrome = Jim Edmonds
I remember hearing in the 1980s about a player who had some kind of condition where he had to take drugs that would kill a healthy person. I halfway remember Danny Tartabull and KC infielder being associated with that memory, although Tartabull had moved to the outfield by the time he was traded to the Royals.
Was San Francisco’s Most Hated Slugger™ at all active during the time these tests were performed?