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February 18, 2003
Steve Bechler, R.I.P.
An early pall was cast over the Baltimore Orioles Spring Training camp in Florida yesterday at the news of the death of Steve Bechler, a 23-year old pitcher who was expected to begin the season with the team's Triple A affiliate in Ottawa. Bechler died of heatstroke yesterday after collapsing during a workout on Sunday afternoon, and he leaves behind a wife who is seven months pregnant. As the Washington Post's Dave Shenin described it: Orioles pitchers and catchers were nearly finished with Sunday's workout on a practice field at the team's spring training complex when Manager Mike Hargrove first noticed Bechler struggling to complete conditioning runs -- the final segment of the workout. The National Weather Service reported a temperature of 81 degrees with 74 percent humidity in Fort Lauderdale at noon on Sunday. But what Bechler's death will jump-start is an honest debate about how Major League Baseball is going to deal with Ephedrine -- a substance that is available legally over the counter in a number of drugs, but has still been banned by a number of other sports leagues. In yesterday's Washington Times, Duff Durkin was the very first to report that a bottle of a supplement containing Ephedrine was found in Bechler's locker -- something he learned from a source on the team. The Times' all-purpose off-field sports reporter Eric Fisher has a pretty complete story on Ephedrine that can catch anyone up on the issues involved: Ephedrine, derived from the botanical herb ephedra, is not banned in Major League Baseball, as it is in the NFL, International and U.S. Olympic Committees, and the NCAA. The drug, while safe in low doses, has been linked to heart arrhythmia, elevated blood pressure, seizures and strokes, as well as interfering with the body's ability to combat and regulate heat. Before Bechler died, a number of sources inside the Orioles organization confirmed that the pitcher, who was listed at 6'2" and 239 pounds, reported to camp out of shape. Despite this, a normally healthy 23-year old man doesn't drop dead in the middle of a 12-minute conditioning run when the temperature is only 79 degrees. For the most part, deaths like this have occurred during grueling football training camps where players work out in full pads in the August heat. For a time last Summer, I wrote about steroids and banned substances so much, I just got sick of it. If anything, one thing I did say was that the baseball players association should have been ashamed for the provisions for testing that they inserted into the last labor agreement -- one that clearly put the long-term health of players at risk. Again, it today's Times, baseball beat writer Thom Loverro sums it up well: Let's see if the Players Association, which had to be shamed into agreeing to limited steroid testing, will step up now to protect its members instead of using Steve Bechler as a bargaining chip down the road somewhere. UPDATE: The argument over this is getting animated over at Sportsfilter. ANOTHER UPDATE: The Broward County Medical Examiner has announced that Ephedrine contributed to Bechler's death. FINAL UPDATE: In Wednesday's paper, the Post's Amy Shipley has her own piece on the growth of Ephedrine use throughout the Majors. Trackback PingsTrackBack URL for this entry: CommentsPost a commentThanks for signing in, . (If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.) |