BALTIMORE — Orioles slugger Chris Davis was suspended 25 games without pay on Friday following a positive test for an amphetamine, a punishment that will extend into the postseason and perhaps 2015. ADVERTISING BALTIMORE — Orioles slugger Chris Davis was
BALTIMORE — Orioles slugger Chris Davis was suspended 25 games without pay on Friday following a positive test for an amphetamine, a punishment that will extend into the postseason and perhaps 2015.
Baltimore leads the AL East by 11 1/2 games with 15 left in the regular season, so the team will be without the 2013 home run champion deep into the playoffs.
“I apologize to my teammates, coaches, the Orioles organization and especially the fans,” Davis said in a statement. “I made a mistake by taking Adderall. I had permission to use it in the past, but do not have a therapeutic use exemption this year. I accept my punishment and will begin serving my suspension immediately.”
Adderall is a drug often used in the treatment of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and narcolepsy, and 119 TUEs were issued for 40-man roster players in the year ending with the 2013 postseason. It is, however, also known as a performance and cognitive enhancer.
Initial positive tests for a banned stimulant result in the player being given an additional six unannounced urine tests over the 12 months following the violation. The 25-game discipline is the penalty for a second positive test.
The 28-year-old Davis informed manager Buck Showalter of the suspension on Thursday night. Davis is prohibited from entering the clubhouse during the ban.
Davis has denied ever using performance-enhancing drugs.
The Orioles are already without catcher Matt Wieters and third baseman Manny Machado, both of whom sustained season-ending injuries. The loss of Davis further hampers Baltimore’s chances of advancing in the playoffs.
“First of all, we got to get to the postseason,” Showalter said. “Our goal right now is to get there. It just means we will be without him for the rest of the regular season.”
Davis is batting .196 with 26 homers and 72 RBIs in 145 games, quite a dropoff from his numbers last year: .286 with 53 home runs and 138 RBIs.
“A lot of people would like to hit 25 to 30 home runs and drive in 80 runs,” Showalter said, projecting what might have been Davis’ final numbers for the season.
Davis loses 17/183rds of his $10.35 million salary, which comes to $961,475. He already has earned a $150,000 bonus for reaching 500 plate appearances, and the suspension costs him the chance to earn another $150,000 for reaching 600.
If he serves any part of the penalty during the 2015 regular season, he would lose part of next year’s salary.
Because a team can’t make roster changes in the middle of a postseason series except to replace injured players, Davis likely would be inactive through the league championship series.
The suspension does not apply to spring training games.
During spring training this year, Davis scoffed at accusations that his power surge came from PEDs.
“It was frustrating when it first came up last year, because what happened to me was the culmination of a lot of hard work over the years,” Davis said. “It was funny because people who didn’t even know me were accusing me of using PEDs. My response was: I’ve always had power. You go back to high school, Little League, minor leagues, college, I’ve always had power. It was just a matter of putting the ball in play consistently.”
Discipline follows Stanton beaning
MILWAUKEE — Miami Marlins pitcher Anthony DeSclafani has received a three-game suspension and Milwaukee Brewers pitcher Mike Fiers has been fined for their actions after Marlins slugger Giancarlo Stanton got hit in the face by a pitch from Fiers.
Major League Baseball announced the discipline Friday. The league said in a statement that DeSclafani’s suspension and an undisclosed fine were for intentionally throwing a pitch at Milwaukee’s Carlos Gomez with a warning in place in the sixth inning of Thursday’s game.
Fiers received an undisclosed fine for what the league said were “his actions which contributed to the benches clearing.”
Stanton sustained multiple facial fractures, dental damage and cuts that needed stitches after being struck in the fifth inning in the 4-2 loss.
Fiers hit Reed Johnson on a hand with his next pitch, and that triggered a benches-clearing shouting match.
The suspension had been scheduled to begin Friday, when the Marlins were to open a series against the Phillies in Philadelphia. However, the suspension was put on hold pending DeSclafani’s appeal through the players’ association.
Stanton said on Twitter earlier Friday that he was “much better.”
A front-runner for the NL MVP award, Stanton’s season likely ended Thursday night after the errant pitch. Blood poured from Stanton’s mouth before he was taken to a hospital.
Stanton leads the NL with 37 home runs and 105 RBIs.
By wire sources