Sports

Cardinals throw support behind McGwire

The St. Louis Cardinals threw their support behind hitting coach Mark McGwire, who admitted Monday that he used steroids as a player.

The St. Louis Cardinals can only hope their new batting coach will now cease to be a sideshow.

Mark McGwire's admission of using steroids while shattering Roger Maris's single-season home run record in 1998 was seen by many on the team as a first step toward rehabilitating a tattered image.

"I'm happy for him that he's taken the platform to kind of change the last picture everybody saw of him, which was him sitting before Congress," said catcher Mike Matheny, a teammate at the end of McGwire's career in 2000-01.

"He's one of the few guys who didn't stand up there and blatantly lie. There's something to be said about that. There's more to be said about standing up like a man and facing the music like he did today."

General manager John Mozeliak was relieved the subject had finally been addressed.

"We knew this was going to be a difficult day, and it's especially difficult for him," Mozeliak said in a telephone interview. "I think you have to admire his courage and willingness to do this."

McGwire likely will appear at the team's annual Winter Warm-up promotion, which starts Saturday and runs for three days. That might give him the chance to apologize directly to fans.

By spring training, the team hopes, McGwire can slip into the background and do his job.

"Fortunately, as a hitting coach it's not the same expectations as the manager has with a face-to-face commitment to the media," Matheny said. "It's out in the open now and he can go do his job, which is to help these guys out."

'Willingness to admit mistakes'

Power Plus

 YEAR  TEAM G  AVG  HR  RBI
 1986  Oak  18  .189  3  9
 1987  Oak  151  .289  49 119 
 1988  Oak  155  .260  32  99
 1989  Oak   143  .231  33  95
 1990  Oak  156  .235  39  108
 1991  Oak   154  .201  22  75
 1992  Oak   139  .268  42  104
 1993  Oak   27  .333  9  24
 1994  Oak   47  .252   9  25
 1995  Oak   104  .274  39  90
 1996  Oak   130  .312   52  113
 1997  Oak  105  .284  34  81
 1997  StL   51  .253  24  42
 1997  Oak/StL  156  .274  58  123
 1998  StL  155  .299  70  147 
 1999  StL  153  .278  65  147
 2000  StL  89  .305  32  73
 2001  StL  97  .187  29  64
 Totals  MLB  1,874  .263  583  1,414

Taking the job as Hal McRae's replacement forced McGwire's hand, although he took plenty of time crafting a statement after being hired in late October.

Even if all those tape-measure shots launched during baseball's "Summer of Love" are now unofficially listed with an asterisk, La Russa spoke glowingly of McGwire's qualifications as the team's new batting instructor.

"No one on the teams I managed worked harder or better than Mark," La Russa said. "And now his willingness to admit mistakes, express his regret, and explain the circumstances that led him to use steroids add to my respect for him."

La Russa was McGwire's manager virtually all his 16-year career in both Oakland and St. Louis. Also his fiercest defender, angrily circling the wagons after The AP reported that McGwire used androstenedione during his then-record 70-homer season in 1998. Andro, as it was known, was made a controlled substance until 2004, when it also was banned by baseball.

The manager said he didn't know until Monday that McGwire used steroids, which weren't banned by baseball until the year after McGwire's retirement.

"I've defended Mark because I observed him develop his unique power hitting skill through a rigorous physical and fundamental workout program," La Russa said. "He has a lot to offer our team as our hitting coach."

'The Cardinals welcome him back'

Team chairman Bill DeWitt Jr. said McGwire, 46, did the "right thing."

"No one condones what Mark did more than 10 years ago," DeWitt said. "But we hired him as our hitting coach because we know there are many contributions that Mark can and will make to our team and to this game.

"I'm glad Mark has gone public and the Cardinals welcome him back as our hitting coach."

Albert Pujols was a rookie in 2001 and is the only former teammate still with the Cardinals. He declined comment on McGwire's admission through his agent Monday, although recently he credited McGwire for helping him with concentration and focus.

Matt Holliday is among a handful of Cardinals who already have an idea of McGwire's coaching style after hitting with him in southern California during the last off-season. McGwire said he called both Cardinals stars on Monday.

"I think he'll do great. He's a very good communicator," Holliday said. "I think people are very interested to see what he has to say and he's someone I think everyone will respect."