31 Results for balco

The fastest man in the prison yard

Mike Fish, ESPN.com

He was the World's Fastest Man and lived with Marion Jones. In an exclusive interview from prison, Tim Montgomery tells ESPN.com how it all fell apart.

Story | Conversation | September 19, 2009

Two decades of the World's Fastest Men

Mike Fish, ESPN.com

From Ben Johnson to Usain Bolt, the stories and the record races of the 'World's Fastest Men' over the last two decades are recounted.

Story | Conversation | August 12, 2009

Lost legacy of the world's fastest man

Mike Fish, ESPN.com

It's been a long time since being the world's fastest man meant much in this country. Can Usain Bolt bring the nobility back to the title?

Story | Conversation | August 12, 2009

Questions remain on what A-Rod took

Mike Fish, ESPN.com

A doctor versed in the steroid world has never heard of the drug Alex Rodriguez described taking.

Story | Conversation | February 17, 2009

A steroid life in baseball's fast lane

Mike Fish, ESPN.com

By the time the feds busted him for selling steroids, Kirk Radomski claimed to have some 300 clients in major league baseball. He tells his story to "Outside the Lines."

Story | Conversation | January 23, 2009

Rydze is latest Steelers link to PEDs

Mike Fish, ESPN.com

Steve Courson, Terry Long, Rocky Bleier and others from the team's past were linked to performance-enhancing drugs. Dr. Richard Rydze, who served on the Steelers' medical staff for over two decades, is the latest.

Story | Conversation | January 14, 2009

Former Steelers doctor embraced HGH

Mike Fish, ESPN.com

Dr. Richard Rydze was a member of the Pittsburgh Steelers' medical staff for more than two decades. Then, he abruptly left, four months after his name surfaced as a big-time buyer of HGH. Investigative reporter Mike Fish examines the connection.

Story | Conversation | January 14, 2009

Radomski's legacy: The man who made the Mitchell report sing

Mike Fish, ESPN.com

Kirk Radomski was a source, but he says he wasn't the only source of the steroids in baseball clubhouses. On the eve of his appearance at a congressional hearing, Radomski talks to ESPN.com's Mike Fish about baseball's steroids problem.

Story | Conversation | February 11, 2008

Ex-Mets clubhouse attendant Radomski sentenced to 5 years probation

Mike Fish, ESPN.com

A former clubhouse attendant who implicated dozens of major leaguers in the use of performance-enhancing drugs was sentenced to five years of probation Friday.

Story | Conversation | February 08, 2008

The man who made the Mitchell report walks away free

Mike Fish, ESPN.com

Without Kirk Radomski, the Mitchell Report would have been a bare-bones study. Federal authorities apparently appreciated that by letting Radomski walk away a free man, writes Mike Fish from the scene of the sentencing.

Story | Conversation | February 08, 2008

Graham to receive court-appointed attorney

Mike Fish, ESPN.com

Track coach involved in BALCO case is set to return to court Friday.

Story | Conversation | December 11, 2007

If positive test is an issue, Bonds' defense team has options

Mike Fish, ESPN.com

If it becomes an issue, the government's evidence of a positive steroids test for Barry Bonds might not hold up in court, writes ESPN.com investigative reporter Mike Fish.

Story | Conversation | December 06, 2007

Bonds' positive steroid test discovered among BALCO evidence

Mike Fish, ESPN.com

Thursday's indictment of Barry Bonds includes the news that he tested positive for steroids. But those positive tests weren't administered by Major League Baseball. Instead, they came from BALCO, writes Mike Fish.

Story | Conversation | November 15, 2007

Lawyers for Graham ask to be dropped from case

Mike Fish, ESPN.com

Trevor Graham's two lawyers have asked to withdraw from his case, and a judge might rule on the request at Tuesday's scheduled court appearance in San Francisco, Mike Fish writes.

Story | Conversation | November 12, 2007

The life and times of Jason Grimsley since the affidavit

Mike Fish, ESPN.com

Jason Grimsley has tried to live a quiet life since he talked to federal investigators about performance-enhancing drugs in baseball. The upcoming Mitchell report is likely to shatter that silence, Mike Fish writes.

Story | Conversation | November 06, 2007