View Full Version : Former Yankee Leyritz admits taking amphetamines


faba
06-09-2006, 01:06 PM
While baseball's latest focus in its fight against ridding the sport of performance-enhancing drugs is on human growth hormone, it's another banned drug that a former Yankee fan favorite has confessed to using.


AP Photo
Leyritz is best-known for his three-run homer off Mark Wohlers in Game 4 of the 1996 World Series.



"I can remember my first ," Jim Leyritz said during an interview Thursday on XM Satellite Radio. "I was out all night drinking with Andy Hawkins and some of the guys on the team. I was a young player."
Leyritz, who broke into the big leagues in 1990 with the Yankees, played 11 seasons in the majors with six different teams.
"I came in. I was hung over, sleeping by my locker. And all of a sudden, [Don] Mattingly came to me and said, 'Hey, you're in the lineup.' And I went, 'What?' He goes, 'Yeah, I just hurt my back.'
"Now I'm walking around, I'm going, 'I don't know how I'm going to do this. There's no way that I can go play this game today.' I ran into my teammate who I knew had some of the 'little helpers,' as they called them.
"He said, 'Take one of these. It should help. It'll take the edge off.'
"So sure enough, I took one. He goes, 'OK, you can take two, but no more than two.' So I popped one more, and I went out and went 3-for-4 with two homers."
According to retrosheet.org, Leyritz is referencing a Saturday, June 30 game in 1990 against the White Sox, where he went 3-for-5 with two homers and four RBI.
His recollection of the day isn't perfect spot-on, however, as Mattingly played first base and Leyritz manned third.
This admission comes in the wake of an investigation of pitcher Jason Grimsley (http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/players/profile?statsId=4425), where Grimsley told federal agents that he used illegal performance-enhancing drugs.
According to court documents, Grimsley failed a league drug test in 2003. Authorities said when he was cooperating, he admitted to using human growth hormone, amphetamines and steroids.
He added that amphetamine use was prevalent in pro baseball, and that it was placed in coffee in clubhouses -- marked "leaded" or "unleaded" to indicate which pots contained the drugs, according to court documents.
During the offseason, owners and players agreed to increase the penalties for performance-enhancing drugs to 50 games for a first offense, 100 games for a second and a lifetime ban for a third.

GimmeShelter
06-09-2006, 02:02 PM
Yet another Yankee instance of cheating.

How soon before the Golden Child Jeter is nailed? ;)

Jet/BosoxFan
06-09-2006, 04:26 PM
Nice of Leyritz to bring Hawkins into it. Its probably easier to name the players past and present who dont pop speed pills.

Smurf
06-11-2006, 08:48 PM
looks like somebody wanted another 15 minutes of fame.
Im sure it's true...but the fact Donny baseball was at first makes me believe it might not be all true.

Smurf
06-11-2006, 08:54 PM
What I find really disturbing?

Major league teams have a guy who is buying drugs to give the players with the money it makes from the fans.

GimmeShelter
06-11-2006, 09:02 PM
Leyritz also copped to using HGH.

Smurf
06-11-2006, 09:08 PM
Im willing to bet in the 90's...there were more players in the clubhouse on something than not. Which makes me sick.

Looks like Canseco was right after all.

124
06-11-2006, 09:15 PM
He said he tried in 2001, he was later released by the Mets before the season in 2001.

Morons. Don't even tie the 96 WS to this.

Thor99
06-11-2006, 11:43 PM
Did he admit to losing $100 to me in pool? Because he did. He and Ramiro Mendoza.

Max
06-12-2006, 12:41 AM
In related news Mark Wohlers admitted to not using anything to help his performance.

Film at 11.

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