Wednesday, July 20, 1988/The Battalion/Page 5 NFL enacts rule to limit steroid use NEW YORK (AP) — It probably doesn’t mean the return to the days of 240-pound linemen, but the NFL is getting tougher on the use of ster oids, which for more than a decade turned some marginal players into near-300-pounders. The league said Tuesday that players caught using steroids a sec ond time could be subject to disci pline by Commissioner Pete Rozelle. The warning was contained in Ro- zeile’s annual drug memo sent to all NFL training camps. The discipline was not specified in the 15-page document and league officials sought to play down the change. “Last year we tested the players for anabolic steroids for the first time, this year we are again testing,” said NFL spokesman Joe Browne. “The difference this year is that we have told the players that they could face possible disciplinary ac tion. However I am not suggesting suspensions for testing positive for anabolic steroids at this time.” Doctors and other critics of ster oids have long warned of their ad verse side effects, including the long-term possibility of cancer, steri lity and various other maladies or diseases. The NCAA began a testing pro gram two years ago that resulted in several football players, including All-American linebacker Brian Bos- worth of Oklahoma, being banned from bowl games. Bosworth, who said he took them only once, now plays for the Seattle Seahawks. Rozelle’s first mention of steroids was in his 1987 message on prohib ited drugs, which also include co caine, marijuana and ampheta mines. “The League no longer merely condemns the misuse of these sub- | stances,” he said in last year’s memo. “They are prohibited in any quantity for any purpose.” That phrase was also contained in this year’s message. But Rozelle went further this year, noting that players in whom steroids are detected in camp-open ing drug tests are subject to the ran dom testing for “reasonable cause,” similar to that imposed on those who test positive for other substances. If that takes place at training camp, Rozelle said, the player will then be re-tested within four weeks. If that test turns up positive, he will then undergo a complete medical evaluation by the team physician and the NFL’s drug advisor, Dr. Forrest Tennant. “Each instance in which a second positive test for anabolic steroids is confirmed will be handled on a case- by-case basis,” Rozelle wrote. “In volved players will be subject to ap propriate discipline by the commis sioner.” Sports Rockets sign guard Woods on may go after Malone next Houston club HOUSTON (AP) — The Houston Rockets signed free agent guard Mike Woodson to a five- year contract Tuesday, one day after trading popular Robert Reid to the NBA expansion team Charlotte Hornets. New Rockets Coach Don Chaney said one of his immediate needs has been met with the sign ing of Woodson, who played under Chaney with the Los Angeles Clippers. His other need is for a forward to play alongside star center Akeem Ola- juwon. “One of my immediate needs for this team was to have a bona fide shooting guard. As far as I’m concerned, Mike will be the starting guard,” Chaney said during an afternoon news confer ence at The Summit. Woodson said deciding with which team to play was a new experience for him since being traded three times throughout his nine-year Na tional Basketball Association career. “I wanted to get out of L.A.,” Woodson said who played for the Clippers the last two seasons. “The last two years has been very, very frustrat ing as far as winning ballgames. “This is a team I think I can play for. I had it mapped out a list of teams I thought I could play for and this was probably the number one team. This is a big moment for me. I don’t think when you play this game no one likes to lose.” Woodson, who is the first player signed by the Rockets under the new collective bargaining agreement between the NBA and the player’s as sociation, said he also talked to Phoenix, Detroit and the Clippers. Speculation continues that the Rockets may sign another free agent, Moses Malone, who earned NBA most-valuable player honors during a previous tenure with Houston. The 6-foot-5, 198-pound Woodson led the Clippers in scoring the last two seasons, averag ing 18 points and 3.4 assists in 1987-88 and 17.1 points and 2.7 assists during the 1986-87 season. He established career season-highs in assists (273), free throw percentage (.868) and minutes played (2,534) last season. He has a career aver age of 15.1 points in 629 games. Woodson was the 12th pick in the first round by New York in 1980 after an outstanding col lege career with Indiana. After one season with Knicks, he was traded to New Jersey for former Rockets’ star Mike Newlin. Early in the 1981-82 season New Jersey traded Woodson with a first- round draft pick to Kansas City for Sam Lacey. He spent five seasons with the Kings including one in Sacramento before being traded to Los Angeles in August 1986 with Larry Drew, a first- round draft choice and a second-round draft pick for Junior Bridgeman, Franklin Edwards and Derek Smith. Woodson has not avearged below 15 points a game in six of the last seven seasons, and he scored his career-high 48 points while with the Kings in 1983 — making 22 of 24 from the field in that game. He has not made less than .800 from the free throw line in each of the last five seasons. The Rockets traded 10-year veteran Reid on Monday for guard Bernard Thompson and a second-round draft choice in 1990. Chaney said the main reason Reid was re leased was that once they shed Reid’s $475,000-a- year salary, the Rockets had room under the NBA’s $6.7 million salary cap for Woodson. Woodson, who was making about $375,000 with the Clippers, will be paid a salary nearly identical to Reid’s by the Rockets although exact terms of Woodson’s contract were not disclosed. “When you’re making deals and trying to im prove your team, you make business decisions,” Chaney said. “Basketball is run like a business nowadays.” The Rockets now believe they have solved their problems at shooting guard with the addi tion of the 30-year-old Woodson and No. 1 draft pick Derrick Chievous of Missouri. Skins’ Schroeder wants starting job or trade CARLISLE, Pa. (AP) — Jay Sch roeder, displaced as the Washington quarterback in last year’s Super Bowl season after a Pro Bowl year in 1986, said Tuesday that he would prefer to be traded rather than remain a backup to Doug Williams. “I’ve had a blast playing here,” Schroeder said. “But then again, if you’re not going to play, it’s not the place to be. You’d rather start some where else and take your chances on getting to the (playoffs) with some body else.” Schroeder led the Redskins to the NFC Championship game in 1986, his first full season. But last season he was benched twice due to ineffectiveness, the last time for good. Williams replaced him in the regular-season finale and went on to lead Washington to a 42- 10 Super Bowl victory over the Denver Broncos. Schroeder and Redskins Coach Joe Gibbs had a one-on-one talk late Monday night to discuss the situa tion. Gibbs categorized the confer ence as “a good talk,” but Schroeder said the discussion did little to make him feel better about his situation. “I walked out feeling the same as I did when I walked in,” he said. “Nothing’s new.” Schroeder, who is 27 to Williams’ 33, replaced an injured Joe Theis- mann in Week 11 of the 1985 sea son. He helped the Redskins win that game and four of the next five. In 1986 he threw for 4,109 yards and 22 touchdowns to help Wash ington move to within one game of the Super Bowl. “This situation is hard because I’ve been there, I like the feeling of being there and I want it again,” Schroeder said. “Nine time out of 10, once the young guys go out there and play, they find out it’s fun. They want to be out there all the time, and when they’re not, they say the things I’m saying.” Schroeder said there “have been talks” between his agent and officials of the Los Angeles Raiders concern ing a possible trade. Asked when such talks last occurred, he replied, “I don’t want to answer that.” There were reports before the draft that the Raiders were attempt ing to put together a package of draft choices for Schroeder and San Diego also expressed interest. But both said they thought the Redskins’ asking price was too high. With Williams coming off knee surgery and third-string quarterback Mark Rypien still waiting to see his first minute of NFL action, it would appear that the Redskins would be reluctant to trade Schroeder. ‘Wrist watch’ may be over for rejuvenated Danny White THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. (AP) — Second-string quarterback Danny White threw a series of 50-yard passes and walked to the sidelines with a big smile. “The wrist watch is dead and bur ied,” he said. “You can burn it.” The 36-year-old White was plagued throughout the 1987 season by calcium deposits in the wrist of his right arm which kept him in pain. His performances suffered accord ingly as he suffered 17 interceptions with only 12 touchdowns passes. The heralded “wrist watch” devel oped because nobody, including White, knew how he would pass in a game because of the wrist’s condi tion. White hopes his 13th year in the NFL will be his lucky one. He dreams of a scenario where he wrests the starting job from Steve Pelluer and finally gets the Cowboys into the Super Bowl. “I feel I can regain the consistency I had in the past and get my job back,” White said. “My wrist is no problem. The pain is gone. This year there is no ice, no tape and no braces. Last year it was painful ev- erytime I played.” Pelluer turned in back-to-back mistake-free performances as Dallas knocked both St. Louis and the Los Angeles Rams out of the NFL play offs in the final two games of the sea son. But Coach Tom Landry was im pressed with White’s early perfor mance in training camp this week. “He’s been looking good but we’ll find out,” Landry said. “Two-a-day workouts take their toll.” The Cowboys were 6-2 in the 1986 season before White was sacked by the New York Giants’ Carl Banks. White’s wrist was broken and so were the Cowboys’ hopes of a playoff season. “It has been one of the toughest things to get over,” White said. Tyson may be near agreement with manager NEW YORK (AP) — Lawyers for heavyweight champion Mike Tyson and his estranged manager, Bill Cay- ton, said Tuesday they are hopeful they can agree this week to allow Ty son to face Frank Bruno on Sept. 3 in London. The agreement, if reached, would also postpone until a fall trial the is sue of whether Cayton will manage Tyson until 1992, when the contract which Cayton claims to have will ex pire. During six hours of conferences and negotiations in New York State Supreme Court, the attorneys met twice with Justice David H. Edwards J r - “Let the record show that the at torneys for the parties have been in conference with the court this' af ternoon in an attempt to resolve some of the differences,” Edwards said from the bench. Tyson’s lawyers agreed that until the court reconvenes he will make no attempt to negotiate sites for him self. Cayton had already been re strained by the court from making deals for Tyson. “The only thing that happened to day was that we agreed to preserve the status quo,” said Peter Parcher, a lawyer for Tyson. Tyson did not appear at the hear ing, which consisted only of brief statements from Justice Edwards and an agreement by the lawyers to continue negotiating until Thurs day. Tyson claims that he terminated his contracts with Cayton and is not committed to Cayton and his com pany. Cayton, who co-managed Ty son with Jimmy Jacobs until his part ner’s death on March 23, alleges that upon Jacobs’ death he became Ty son’s sole manager into 1992. The litigation over Tyson’s man ager has put on hold his plans to de fend the title against Bruno in Lon don. Thomas Puccio, Cayton’s lawyer, agreed with Parcher that successful negotiations in the next 48 hours could allow that fight to take place. “I think it’s fair to say that the par ties have made it possible for the Bruno figl^t,” Puccio said. “We’ll have to see whether that can be worked out.” ' ' If they can agree on the Bruno fight and a method to ensure that the $21 million Tyson earned for knocking out Michael Spinks can be safely frozen, then the overall issue of whether Cayton is Tyson’s man ager would be postponed several months until a full trial can be held. 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