I was also going
through a personality change. I was becoming a hard-ass, one of the meanest
guys on the team. It was a dramatic change, and the coaches loved it. So did I,
in a way, because being passive hadn't done anything for me. But I also knew my
behavior was becoming erratic, and that frightened me. Images of violence often
filled my mind. I'd drive along and find myself thinking about sick things like
crushing people to death, tearing off their limbs. I'd be grinding my teeth and
gripping the wheel so hard that my arms would hurt.
Because of the
tension at my house, I started spending a lot of time at my supplier's place in
the summer of '85. Hyder and Myers came up from school, and we sat around
injecting ourselves with all kinds of steroids, whatever was there.
One night we all
injected each other, then went out drinking and got crazy. George had a pistol
and we picked up a friend who had a shotgun, and I drove everybody out into the
country in George's pickup. As we went past signs, those guys would blast away
at them. They blew out the spotlight and security camera in front of an estate,
and then shot the windows out of a bus parked in front of a church. One of the
bullets went through the bus and killed a cow in the nearby pasture, and the
cow slumped over the fence and rolled into the road. Blood was dripping from
its head. I freaked, but the other guys were laughing. One of them wanted to
shoot the cow again. Right then a cop car started chasing us, but we drove down
some paths in the woods and lost the cop.
This hadn't been
my way, but it had become my way. Steroids ruled my life.
That fall, my
second varsity season, I played pretty well, but we finished with a 5-6 record.
The high point for me came when we played Michigan, a team I'd dreamed about
playing against since I was a little kid. Ohio State-Michigan, that was what
college football was all about. And if I played for South Carolina against
Michigan—well, that was pretty damn close.
To get really
fired up, I started taking a steroid called Halotestin a couple of weeks before
the game. Its only effect, as far as I could tell, was that it enhanced
aggression. It should have been called Holocaust, judging by what it did to me.
My aggressiveness was out of control. I was cheapshotting people in practice,
clotheslining them, ripping scout team quarterbacks' helmets off in noncontact
drills. The coaches liked my enthusiasm, but they had to sit me down a few
times for being a little too wild. I played great against Michigan, even though
we got our butts kicked. Against Georgia the next week, we lost again, 13-6,
but I was named defensive player of the game.
I started getting
sick toward the end of the season, though. During the game against East
Carolina in late October, I had bad chest pains, numbness in my arm and chills,
and I had to come out in the second half. I thought I was dying. They cut off
my jersey and took me to the hospital in an ambulance. The doctor said my
cholesterol level and blood pressure were off the charts, probably because of
the steroids. The pain was from angina, a pre-heart attack condition. Still,
the coaches didn't seem to notice. My dad told Washburn he wanted me tested
weekly for steroid use, but nothing came of it. And me—all I could think of was
football. I was obsessed. We players even had a motto: "Bury me massive, or
don't bury me at all."
I stopped taking
steroids for a while because I'd been so sick, and after the season I had knee
surgery. Then, over spring break, I went down to Fort Lauderdale. I was back on
steroids and was very big and cocky, and after a few drinks one night, I got
into a hassle with two cops in front of a bar. They told me to move, and I told
them that if it wasn't for their guns and badges, I'd beat their asses. The
next thing I knew, they'd clubbed me across the neck and legs, beat me up
pretty good, and taken me to the station. When I went in front of the judge the
next day, though, he just looked at me and said, "Trying to be a Fighting
Gamecock, huh?" Then he let me go.
Not long after
that I had a pain in my side, which I thought was from the beating. But when I
went to a doctor I found out I had a swollen liver from the steroids. About
this time Dr. Akers asked me if I was on steroids. I told him I was but asked
him not to tell anybody. He turned right around and told Morrison, who called
me in to find out who else was taking them. I told him I wouldn't talk about
anybody else. Morrison looked at me and said, "Don't do it anymore."
That was it. He's very quiet, not real communicative. He played for the New
York Giants for 14 years, and he's very old school and tough: You hurt? Put a
little dirt on it. So the whole thing just sort of went away.
Just the same, I
vowed to turn over a new leaf. I was going to watch what I ate and if I used
drugs at all, it would be very little. I was getting sick a lot, and even
though I'd been doing O.K. academically, I was having a hard time concentrating
on school. I'd either be up all night or I'd be listless and sleep a lot. Also,
the way my sex drive came and went was bizarre. And when I got drunk—oh
brother! One night in my dorm room, I pulled a shotgun on the pizza delivery
boy, threw him down and put the gun in his face. It was loaded and I could have
blown the kid all over the floor, but I was just fooling around. It was the
kind of thing I thought was funny.