Baseball Strikes Out
Reveal
The Center for Investigative Reporting and PRX
4.7 • 8.7K Ratings
🗓️ 11 June 2022
⏱️ 51 minutes
🔗️ Recording | iTunes | RSS
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Summary
In the early 2000s, rampant steroid use across Major League Baseball became the biggest scandal in the sport’s history. But fans didn’t want to hear the difficult truth about their heroes – and the league didn’t want to intervene and clean up a mess it helped make.
We look back at how the scandal unraveled with our colleagues from the podcast Crushed from Religion of Sports and PRX. Their show revisits the steroid era to untangle its truth from the many myths, examine the legacy of baseball’s so-called steroid era and explore what it tells us about sports culture in America.
We start during the 1998 MLB season, when the home run race was on. Superstar sluggers Mark McGwire and Sammy Sosa battled to set a new single-season record, and McGwire, the St. Louis Cardinals first baseman, was portrayed as the hero baseball needed: part humble, wholesome, working man and part action hero, with his brawny build and enormous biceps. So when a reporter spotted a suspicious bottle of pills in his locker in the middle of the season, most fans plugged their ears and refused to acknowledge that baseball might be hooked on steroids.
Joan Niesen, a sportswriter and host of the podcast Crushed, takes us on a deep dive into an era that dethroned a generation of superstars, left fans disillusioned and turned baseball’s record book on its head. The story takes us from ballparks and clubhouses to the halls of Congress to explain how baseball was finally forced to reckon with its drug problem.
This is a rebroadcast of an episode that originally aired in July 2021.Â
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| 0:00.0 | From the Center for Investigative Reporting in PRX, this is Reveal. |
| 0:05.8 | I'm Al Letton. |
| 0:07.6 | It's almost midnight in the summer of 98, and the St. Louis Cardo's Clubhouse is jam-packed with reporters. |
| 0:15.9 | Everyone is jostling for space, ducking under cameras, waiting. |
| 0:20.5 | It was glorious. The circus came to town. |
| 0:23.8 | That's Associated Press Reporter Steve Wilsn. He's a part of the scrum. |
| 0:28.5 | They are all there to cover the home run race. |
| 0:31.8 | Mark McGuire had just hit his 45th homer of the season and is on pace to break the single season record. |
| 0:40.2 | I was giddy about it. I was a little league player who liked hitting home runs and now to see |
| 0:45.2 | these guys do it and as far as they were hitting it, this baseball is best. But Willstein is there |
| 0:51.1 | to cover baseball history. My philosophy is to bring the reader as close as possible into the scene, into the locker room. |
| 0:58.8 | And I'm always filling my yellow legal pad with notes about details that may or may not make it into a story. |
| 1:06.4 | It's just something I did my whole career. |
| 1:08.7 | And sometimes it pays off. |
| 1:21.8 | He notices Cardinals' legend Stan Musil's number displayed on the wall above McGuire's locker. |
| 1:25.7 | He writes that down, along with other stuff he sees inside the locker. |
| 1:29.8 | I saw the can of Popeye spinach, which I thought was funny. |
| 1:33.2 | And then I saw this pack of sugarless gum. |
| 1:35.1 | I knew his father was a dentist. |
| 1:37.7 | So I thought that was cute and all-American. |
| 1:39.3 | He said it wasn't chewing tobacco. |
| 1:43.9 | You see, sports lockers are really more like cubbies. |
... |
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