HGH Abuse In The World Of Baseball

November 18, 2010
By Edward Garnet

Over the past ten years, we've seen an increase in the number of cases of well-respected athletes coming under fire for drug use. More and more often, we've had to temper our respect for an athlete when we find out that his or her exceptional performances were aided by the use of drugs.

It is possible to compare the greatest athletes of today with those of yesteryear, when performances were simply a show of human physical prowess as opposed to a man or woman helped along by foreign substances? It really doesn't seem that it's even possible to compare the two.

There is a growing number of sports fans who, upon discovering that their favorite athletes have been using performance-enhancing drugs, are boycotting these sports in disgust. Baseball in particular is seeing fans abandoning the sport in disappointment.

According to recent statistics, ticket sales for baseball games have gone down by 1-2%. That doesn't seem like much, but when many other sports are seeing increases in attendance, it doesn't reflect well on baseball's popularity and it has the league concerned.

League officials are taking steps to wrestle with the drug problem and reign in the use of these substances. Bud Selig, the Commissioner of the MLB, has had his science advisor working on developing a test for the use of human growth hormone.

In Bud Selig's opinion, there is no place for HGH abuse in the league. There is actually already a ban in place on the use of HGH by the Major League Baseball Association. The problem is that there are no tests in place to determine whether an athlete has been using HGH as a performance-enhancing drug.

Utilizing the honor system to discourage the use of these drugs doesn't seem to be a wise idea. It's only logical that an athlete who uses illegal drugs to get an edge would have no qualms about lying as well.

It's easy to think about the old days of baseball and feel a wave of nostalgia. For one, in the old days we knew that our favorite athletes were simply people who worked hard to achieve their goals and succeeded.

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