Jose Canseco

Jose Canseco
José Canseco Capas Jr., is a Cuban-American former Major League Baseballoutfielder, and designated hitter. Canseco has admitted using performance-enhancing drugs during his playing career, and in 2005 wrote a tell-all book, Juiced: Wild Times, Rampant 'Roids, Smash Hits & How Baseball Got Big, in which he claimed that the vast majority of MLB players use steroids. After retiring from Major League Baseball, he also competed in boxing and mixed martial arts...
NationalityCuban
ProfessionAthlete
Date of Birth2 July 1964
CountryCuba
Tony La Russa was quoted as saying that I was using steroids back then, and I was talking about it in the clubhouse, openly.
You get them-anywhere. It's-you can go right here to the corner gym and get it. It's that simple. It's that easy. But-obviously, I don't recommend using them or getting them without supervision, or a prescription, because they are illegal.
I stand 100 percent by the truth, exactly what happened.
Proof Positive, I'm a very positive person and I've moved on.
Did I put them in contact with the people to acquire them? Yes. Did I educate them on how to use them properly, and what way, shape, or form, and when, and with what supplements? Yes. Absolutely.
Well, it's a true statement. No ifs and buts about it,
I think people are now realizing, or starting to realize, that every word, more or less, I said in the book is the absolute truth,
I thought he had some good qualities. He liked animals, which was good because I grew up on a farm.
I don't know Jose. I was better than Jose then, and I've been better than him his whole career.
Maybe not accomplish the things I did, the freakish things I did, being 6'4
I had it analyzed at the lab. It was speed!
There could be a metabolite from the past. No one really knows how long steroids last in your actual system.
There could be a metabolite from the past, ... No one really knows how long steroids last in your actual system.
There is a danger of possibly glorifying the so-called author scheduled to testify today by indirectly assisting him to sell more books through his claim that what he was doing was somehow good for his country or the game of baseball.