In 2007, the Mitchell Report shocked traditionalists who were appalled
that drugs had corrupted the pure game of baseball. Nathan Corzine
rescues the story of baseball's relationship with drugs from the
sepia-toned tyranny of such myths. In Team Chemistry, he reveals a game
splashed with spilled whiskey and tobacco stains from the day the first
pitch was thrown. Indeed, throughout the game's history, stars and
scrubs alike partook of a pharmacopeia that helped them stay on the
field and cope off of it:
- In 1889, Pud Galvin tried a testosterone-derived elixir to help him
pile up some of his 646 complete games.
- Sandy Koufax needed Codeine and an anti-inflammatory used on horses to
pitch through his late-career elbow woes.
- Players returning from World War II mainstreamed the use of the
amphetamines they had used as servicemen.
- Vida Blue invited teammates to cocaine parties, Tim Raines used it to
stay awake on the bench, and Will McEnaney snorted it between innings.
Corzine also ventures outside the lines to show how authorities
handled--or failed to handle--drug and alcohol problems, and how those
problems both shaped and scarred the game. The result is an eye-opening
look at what baseball's relationship with substances legal and otherwise
tells us about culture, society, and masculinity in America.