Another thing that
had gotten to me was trying to compete with the black guys. I hadn't played
against many blacks, and they intimidated me with their strength and speed. I'd
say that all but a couple of the guys on my team who used steroids were white,
and the reason they did was to keep up with other guys on steroids and with
black athletes. There's no question in my mind that there's a difference in
black and white body types. I don't know why, but I could see the difference in
the locker room. And I knew it when I played against blacks. So a lot of white
guys take steroids to even things out.
I made my
decision, and the funny thing is, I felt good about it. I was looking forward
to the adventure of it and the chance to perform at my best. The thing people
often don't understand is that college athletes feel tremendous pressure to
succeed. Some guys have parents who are pushing them real hard. Other guys are
just very .competitive and have great pride. Nobody wants to sit on the bench
and be a failure.
After I'd made my
decision, getting the stuff was no big deal. I had spent a lot of time back
home at a gym where serious lifters worked out, and I think by now everybody
knows that the majority of bodybuilders and powerlifters use steroids. I had a
friend there, and I knew he could get me what I wanted or tell me where to go
for it. He got me some steroids, and I told him I also wanted hGH, human growth
hormone. He told me where I could get it.
I knew hGH was
expensive, but I'd read in a muscle magazine that it was safer than steroids,
and I wanted to believe that. I also knew that hGH could cause acromegaly—the
enlargement of the brow, hands and feet that's sometimes called
"Frankenstein's syndrome"—but that you'd have to take megadoses for it
to happen. Some bodybuilders take $10,000 worth of hGH per cycle—that's a
bodybuilding term for a series of drugs in varying doses—but I only got $800
worth, enough for 10 injections over eight weeks. Tunnel vision had set in. My
attitude was: Just give me what it takes to get big.
Still, I was
pretty scared because I'd heard all the horror stories about the drugs. My
supplier told me that if I didn't get too crazy with this stuff, didn't abuse
it, I'd be O.K. Then we went down into his basement at home, and he gave me my
first injection, in the top of my butt. I went right to the weight room and had
a great workout. I was pumped, but, of course, it was all psychological.
I had a lot of
injections that summer, and after a while the spots I had to hit on my rear end
got so callused from shots that at times I couldn't even get a needle in. You
don't inject steroids into a vein. It's not like heroin or something. You shoot
it deep into a muscle, and it gradually disperses through the body from there.
It's very hard to shoot yourself up in the butt, and sometimes when I did, I
hit spots that hurt so bad I could barely sit down the next day. Other times
I'd shoot myself in the quad, the front of my thigh. It's dangerous because you
have to go in an inch or so, and you can cause nerve damage if you're not
careful. But if nobody's around to inject you, you have to do it.
You can take most
steroids in pill form, too; but you have to take them every day, and certain
pills can be harder on the liver. With shots you don't need to do it as
often—12 times a month, in my case—and the drug stays in your system longer. At
first I was very worried about needles, but after a while my concern went
away—mainly because my body was changing so fast.
People who say
steroids don't work don't know what they're talking about. You've got to
experience it to know what I mean. Your muscles swell; they retain water and
they just grow. You can work out much harder than before, and your muscles
don't get as sore. You're more motivated in the weight room and you've got more
energy because of the psychological effects of the drug.
I went from about
210 pounds to a lean 235 in eight weeks. My bench press went from the upper
300's to 420, and my squat from 400 to 520. I watched my diet and I was really
cut—big arms, chest and legs, great definition. I went back to Columbia in the
summer of '84, before my first varsity season, for the Iron Cocks meet, a
lifting competition for football players. A bunch of guys who were already on
steroids saw me and said, "Aha, so you bent to the pressure."
I said, "Yeah,
I've begun the chemical warfare." And we laughed. Washburn saw me and said,
"You look great!" He must have known I was using juice.