A Look Back At David Ortiz’s War On Steroids
The cold, hard fact of contemporary baseball, which has been driven home yet again today, is that everyone except for Albert Pujols is on steroids. News broke this morning that David Ortiz and Manny Ramirez tested positive for performance-enhancing drugs in 2003.
Manny’s reported performance-enhancing drug use isn’t news, but Ortiz’s is, even in spite of the rumors that have swirled around him over the last couple of years. Most big-name PED users, prior to being discovered, have preferred to stay as far away from the issue as possible. Some have conceded and toe the “steroids are bad” line. But few have taken the Frank Thomas route and crusaded against PED use. David Ortiz was one of these guys. From the Boston Globe, May 4, 2004:
“Me and Manny, we talked to [Dominican prospects]. We let them know the best way was to work your butt off. I told them [steroids], that’s not where they want to be at.”
…’I just worked hard, tried to eat the best I could, work at the gym, follow the program everybody wanted to teach me. That’s it. Why can’t they do it the same way?”
Maybe David Ortiz is a self-righteous hypocrite. Or maybe he used steroids unwittingly. Which brings me to a point I’d like to make. From the Globe, May 12, 2007:



Well,
My eyes are awful. I broke my glasses almost two years ago, and have been too lazy to get new ones, or contacts. I don’t drive often, so that’s good. But I struggle to watch TV, and I can’t read anything that’s not right in front of my face. Good thing I work on a laptop all day.
David Ortiz has been horrific this season. His current line of .185/.284/.287 isn’t just bad; it’s not worthy of being in a MLB lineup, let alone the DH spot. (I remember him going late in my fantasy draft and some calling it a steal. Ha.) The explanation some have come up with for his fall from grace? He’s off steroids now! Which, in this day and age, is the easy, kneejerk reaction. But even if David Ortiz is off steroids, that doesn’t account for this sort of a drop in his numbers. These are catastrophic drops, not a tapering of home runs levels to a more normal, pre-steroid age count.