http://tinyw.in/ub1S
懶人包
Curt Schilling說當我2008年受傷時
紅襪隊內部人員告訴我
禁藥會對你有幫助
Schilling認為該人鼓勵他使用禁藥
但是....
是誰
我不能說....
而此人已經不在紅襪隊囉
Former Boston Red Sox pitcher Curt Schilling said Thursday that someone in
the organization told him performance-enhancing drugs were an option for him
as he tried to work his way back from a shoulder injury in 2008.
He did not identify the person, but ruled out specific individuals and groups
and clarified it was just one individual.
"It wasn't anybody in uniform, it wasn't (then-general manager) Theo
(Epstein), it wasn't (then-manager Terry Francona), it wasn't (then-assistant
GM) Jed Hoyer, it wasn't one of the owners," Schilling told ESPN on Thursday
after creating a stir the day before by telling ESPN Radio's Colin Cowherd it
was "former members of the organization" who broached the topic with him.
"It was somebody that was involved in the day to days," Schilling continued
Thursday. "It wasn't (head trainer) Paul Lessard, it wasn't (massage
therapist) Russell Nua or (medical operations coordinator) Jim Rowe or
anybody."
Schilling, now an ESPN analyst, noted Thursday that the conversation actually
spurred an investigation by Major League Baseball at the time.
"Someone in the front office became aware of the conversation and went to
MLB," he said. "And there was a conversation that I had to have with people
from Major League Baseball about this conversation. From that perspective the
process worked."
Schilling, who had signed a one-year contract with Boston in 2008 but did not
pitch that season due to the shoulder injury, said the conversation happened
sometime in the middle of that season.
"It was brought to my attention that this is a potential path I might want to
pursue," Schilling said Wednesday on ESPN Radio.
Schilling said the conversation could be overheard by several teammates and
made him uncomfortable.
"It was an incredibly uncomfortable conversation," he said. "Because it came
up in the midst of a group of people. The other people weren't in the
conversation, but they could clearly hear the conversation. And it was
suggested to me that at my age and in my situation, why not? What did I have
to lose? Because if I wasn't going to get healthy, it didn't matter. And if I
did get healthy, great.
"It caught me off guard, to say the least. That was an awkward situation."
Schilling officially retired from baseball in March 2009.