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Grimsley Released Day After Steroid Search, By: Andrew Bagnato

Grimsley Released Day After Steroid Search, By: Andrew Bagnato

Diamondbacks Release Pitcher Jason Grimsley After His Home Was Searched in a Steroid Probe

Jun 7, 2006

Pitcher Jason Grimsley was released by the Arizona Diamondbacks on Wednesday, a day after his home was searched by federal agents following his admission he used human growth hormone, steroids and amphetamines.

The raid and Grimsley's implication of other major league ballplayers was the latest sign that widespread investigations into drug use by athletes are still active, even in the era of tougher testing.

Grimsley's agent told The Associated Press he thought this would mark the end of the 38-year-old reliever's career.

"My guess is Jason's done playing," Joe Bick said in a telephone interview. "I couldn't anticipate that he would play again, but that's his call.

"He didn't want to be a distraction to the team."

Diamondbacks general manager Josh Byrnes said Grimsley asked for his unconditional release in meetings with team officials Tuesday and Wednesday.

"We accepted his request," Byrnes said.

Thirteen federal agents searched Grimsley's home in Scottsdale, Ariz., for six hours Tuesday, but they would not reveal what they found. Investigators who cracked the BALCO steroid scandal in San Francisco said Grimsley initially cooperated in the probe but withdrew his assistance in April, prompting Tuesday's search.

According to court documents released Tuesday, authorities tracked a package containing two "kits" of human growth hormone about a season's supply that was delivered at Grimsley's house on April 19.

Moments later, agents armed with a warrant offered him an option: Cooperate with their investigation into athletes using performance-enhancing drugs, or submit to an immediate search. Grimsley agreed to be interviewed.

He proceeded to detail his "receipt and use of anabolic steroids, amphetamines and human growth hormone over the last several years," but said he went exclusively with HGH when baseball's testing program began.

Grimsley also identified several other players who he said had used or supplied the drugs their names were blacked out from court documents. They included a handful of former teammates and one player he identified as one of his "better friends in baseball," adding that it was common knowledge that "Latin players" were a major source for amphetamines in the sport.

He also identified a personal fitness trainer to several major league ballplayers who once referred him to an amphetamine source, and later supplied him with an array of drugs.

Grimsley's locker was empty when the clubhouse was opened to the media before the afternoon game against Philadelphia at Chase Field.

As for the remainder of Grimsley's $825,000 salary, "there was no negotiation," Bick said. "Released players get paid."

Grimsley was 1-2 with a 4.88 ERA in 19 games as a long reliever this season, his first with Arizona.

Diamondbacks pitcher Terry Mulholland said Grimsley addressed his NL West-leading teammates after Tuesday's loss to the Phillies.

"He expressed to us that he had too much respect for us to allow this to bring us down," Mulholland said. "He's that kind of guy."

Former Kansas City teammate Jeremy Affeldt said he talked to Grimsley earlier in the day.

"He's down. It's an embarrassing thing when you get caught. It was a judgment call on his part. I think he knows it was wrong. I don't think he would deny that," Affeldt said.

Grimsley began his big league career with Philadelphia in 1989 and pitched for Cleveland, California, the New York Yankees, Kansas City, Baltimore and Arizona. He has a career record of 42-58 with a 4.77 ERA.

According to court documents, Grimsley failed a baseball drug test in 2003. Authorities said when he was cooperating, he admitted to using human growth hormone, amphetamines and steroids.

Commissioner Bud Selig had no comment on the specifics of Grimsley's case. Major League Baseball executive vice president Rob Manfred said HGH "is a problem for all sports because there is no universally accepted and validated test."

"No governing body in any sport has ever been able to discipline an athlete for the use of HGH," he said.

Grimsley has spent much of his career as a journeyman, but he made headlines in 1999 when he confessed to his role in the infamous Albert Belle corked bat caper.

Grimsley, who had been Belle's teammate with Cleveland, admitted he worked his way through a crawl space at Comiskey Park in 1994 and dropped through the ceiling in the umpires' room to replace the illegal bat. Five years later, he came clean and solved one of baseball's ongoing mysteries.

"I went sky diving once, and I can compare it to that," Grimsley said at the time. "The adrenaline rush I got from that caper was just like jumping out of an airplane. It was being in a place you're not supposed to be."

Grimsley spent only a few months with the Diamondbacks but was liked by teammates, who seemed stunned by Wednesday's news.

"He was a good teammate to have here while he was here," Diamondbacks catcher Johnny Estrada said. "It's not my business what happens off the field. Obviously, he had some issues."

AP Baseball Writer Ben Walker and AP Sports Writer Doug Tucker contributed to this report.

 



 

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