We never used the
same needle twice, I can tell you that. We tried to be careful how we injected
each other, too, but sometimes you'd hit the sciatic nerve or something, and
the guy's legs would buckle. I mean, none of us were doctors or anything. But
we were needle-happy. We would have injected ourselves with anything, if we
thought it would make us big.
A lot of times, if
we were really getting bigger, we'd increase our dosage to gain bulk even
faster—just fill the syringe to the end. We'd occasionally read the paperwork
that came with the bottles, trying to figure out what a dosage should be for
someone with anemia or a guy whose body can't produce enough testosterone,
which is what the stuff is usually used for. Then we'd take 2, 3, 4, 10, 20
times that amount. Sometimes we'd take our needles and pull half a cc from one
bottle and half from another, just mix them up. The more the better.
By the fall of
'87, my senior season, there was one guy who was taking so many tabs of a
steroid called Anadrol that he developed liver problems. At one point during
the summer of '85, there were guys so heavily on steroids that they couldn't
make it once around the track without getting back cramps from being so
bloated. This alarmed Keith Kephart, our strength coach, so he took all the
linemen in a room and said, "I want to know who's on Anadrol. I'm hearing
horror stories. This is the strongest stuff around. It can be lethal. Now,
who's using?"
A lot of guys
raised their hands, but I didn't because I was on other steroids. Kephart
wanted guys to cut back on their intake. I don't remember him telling us to
stop, but he did say, "If you want counseling, come to me." I really
think he cared, but he didn't think he could change us.
It was common
knowledge that we were using the stuff. I had bottles of juice all over the
place. We threw the used syringes into the waste cans in our rooms. I mean, we
even had syringes sticking in the walls. Coaches would walk in and see the
stuff, but nobody gave a damn. One of the coaches came in for a room check
once, saw a vial with a skull and crossbones on the label and said, "I used
to use Dianabol myself. What's this stuff?" We laughed and said, "It's
a great new product from Germany. Look at the instructions. They're in
German." He just laughed.
Players would stop
by my room, as if it were a store, and ask if they could get some steroids. One
time, even Todd Ellis, our quarterback, asked George Hyder about steroids. He
wondered how much they cost, what the effects were and how long it would take
to get them. I wondered what steroids could do for a quarterback. Build up arm
strength, I guessed. Anyway, George told Todd he didn't have any. I didn't
offer any myself, and I never saw Todd take any. But there was just this sort
of no-big-deal attitude about it all.
The spring of '84,
I bulked up some more, and people were in awe of my strength. I was benching
close to 500 pounds, squatting more than 600. I could do 30 one-armed presses
with a 100-pound dumbbell. I weighed about 260, and I looked like a steroid
user. I took all kinds of stuff, including Equipoise, a horse steroid designed
to make thoroughbreds leaner and more muscular. It was tough on me—I got
colitis and was bleeding rectally—so I switched to other stuff. Guys started
calling me Quasibloato and the Experiment, because they thought I'd take
anything.
My aggression
level was so high that I got into an argument with the team trainer at one
point during spring practice and went to my locker, put my hand through the
metal mesh and ripped the door off its hinges. Then I went back to the Roost
and took a baseball bat and demolished my refrigerator, smashed it to pieces,
and then ripped the phone off the wall. My nerves were on edge like they'd
never been before. At practice one day I got into a fight with Shed Diggs, a
linebacker, because he cut in front of me in line for a drill. I threw him
down, pulled his helmet up far enough so I could get my fist in there and
smashed him in the eye. As he got up, bleeding and humiliated, I felt sympathy
for him. But then the steroids kicked in and I said to myself, "All right!
You're a tough guy!"
I went home for
spring break, and my mom took one look at me and said, "My God! What have
you done to yourself?" I tried to deny everything, but my dad looked in my
bag and found two vials of testosterone. He got very upset. He called our
family doctor and had him try to convince me to get off steroids. My dad tried
to talk me into quitting football and told me that he'd pay for my schooling.
My sister called me constantly, trying to get me off the stuff. But I wouldn't
listen. "I'm sorry," I said to my parents, "but it's a decision
I've made, and I'll try not to abuse the steroids."
I don't know if
you can call steroids addictive, but there's a vicious cycle involved with
using them. The growth of the muscles enhances the aggression and other
psychological changes caused by the drug, and those changes, in turn, make you
want to get bigger and take more steroids. Plus, there is a terrible letdown
when you come off them. I would be very high and then there'd be this extreme
depression. And after each cycle, the comedown itself would get worse, plus,
I'd get sick. I got walking pneumonia, bronchitis, exhaustion to the point
where I had to sleep 12 to 14 hours at a time. Steroids were definitely
wrecking my body.