Canseco confesses regret for naming dopersRetired Major League Baseball "MLB" and "Major Leagues" redirect here. For other uses, see MLB (disambiguation) and Major Leagues (disambiguation). Major League Baseball (MLB) is the highest level of play in North American professional baseball. slugger Jose Canseco said he regretted naming players as steroid users in his 2005 book "Juiced See Joost. See also juice. " during an interview with A and E Network, it was revealed on Tuesday. A documentary called "Jose Canseco: The Last Shot" saw the former Oakland A's star say he regretted ""mentioning players", revelations that led to a 2005 US Congressional hearing Congressional hearings are the principal formal method by which committees collect and analyze information in the early stages of legislative policymaking. Whether confirmation hearings — a procedure unique to the Senate — legislative, oversight, investigative, or a on a doping doping, in electronics: see semiconductor. Altering the electrical conductivity of a semiconductor material, such as silicon, by chemically combining it with foreign elements. scandal that rocked the sport. "I never realized this was going to blow up and hurt so many people," Canseco said. Canseco, 44, said he wrote the book because he wanted revenge upon Major League Baseball for what he considered being "forced out of the game." Conseco, who smashed 462 homer runs in a 17-year career with eight different clubs, named Doiminican Sammy Sosa Samuel Sosa Peralta (born November 12 1968 in San Pedro de MacorĂs, Dominican Republic) is a designated hitter for the Texas Rangers of the American League. His Major League career began when he broke in with the Texas Rangers in 1989. , US star Mark McGwire In a hearing seated at the same table as Canseco, McGwire refused to deny taking steroids under oath, Sosa made an elaborate denial in Spanish and Palmeiro denied taking steroids only to test positive for them later in 2005. "If I could meet with Mark McGwire and these players, I definitely would apologize to them," Canseco said. "They were my friends. I admired them. I respected them." He also helped destroy them in some ways as their reputations did not escape unscathed. Canseco said he was worried about his health because his body cannot produce sufficient testosterone since he has stopped taking performance-enhancing drugs.
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