Performance Enhancing Drugs In Major League Baseball

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Major League Baseball (MLB) has a big issue when to comes to performance enhancing drugs. The current era of the MLB has not been firm enough with its athletes that use and have used performance enhancing drugs. The first punishment usually doesn’t stop players from doping after they come back. Players such as Jenrry Mejia, Neifi Pérez, and Eliézer Alfonzo are examples of players that have been suspended more than once, proving that the first punishment needs to be stricter. If the MLB succeeds in doing this, there will be some hope that the world of baseball will become cleaner than this current era has been and that athletes have a chance to play baseball purely. Baseball desperately needs to make a stricter anti-doping policy, including …show more content…

There is proof that we need a stricter doping punishment. On February 12th, 2016, Jenrry Mejia, a New York Mets pitcher, got the first lifetime ban ever given in baseball after he took performance enhancing drugs for a third time. His first punishment of getting suspended for 80 games did not stop him from coming back and making the same choice and then he got caught again, this time at a suspension of 162 games which is a whole season of baseball. Yet he still didn’t learn a lesson and as a result, he was thrown out of baseball “forever”. Recently, Jenrry Mejia signed a 1.7 million dollar contract to be a relief pitcher on the Mets during the 2018 season (Martin, New York Mets reliever Jenrry Mejia receives permanent ban from MLB for failed drug test). The reason he is allowed to play is because of Major League Baseball’s current drug policy, which clearly states that Mejia could apply for reinstatement and return in two years. (Edelman, Jenrry Mejia Is Likely To Pitch For Mets In 2018, Despite 'Lifetime Ban’) Two years from his 2016 season would be 2018 and he could play if he received approval from the State Commissioner. Currently,he has not been playing, but has been waiting to play again on Citi Field. If the Major League Baseball is against performance enhancing drugs, why would they allow a doper who received a lifetime ban back into play? Baseball needs to …show more content…

When Robinson Cano got suspended he said this: Furosemide “This substance was given to me by a licensed doctor in the Dominican Republic to treat a medical ailment,” Cano said. “While I did not realize at the time that I was given a medication that was banned, I obviously now wish that I had been more careful.” (Withiam, Justin Verlander Isn’t Buying Robinson Cano’s PED ‘excuse’). If MLB rulemakers made a new prohibited substance list that coaches could provide for their players, perhaps that would stop ridiculous excuses like

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