Pubdate: Tue, 14 Mar 2000 Source: Washington Post (DC) Copyright: 2000 The Washington Post Company Contact: 1150 15th Street Northwest, Washington, DC 20071 Feedback: http://washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/edit/letters/letterform.htm Website: http://www.washingtonpost.com/ Author: Richard Cohen STRIKE THREE FOR STRAWBERRY I met Seth Mnookin in Los Angeles, lunch at the Beverly Hilton Hotel. He was covering the McCain campaign and so was I - and so were the others at our table. Somehow the conversation turned to addictions - cigarettes, mostly. It was then that Mnookin mentioned he had been a heroin addict. Oh, and coke, crack, pot, mescaline, LSD, speed and prescription painkillers, too. But it was heroin that nearly killed him. He's clean now, back to writing (which he does very well) and working for Brill's Content, a magazine about the media. Last August, he wrote his own story for Salon.com, an online magazine. Read it. It's worth your time. At lunch, I asked him what he thought of Darryl Strawberry, the former Yankees star who was suspended last month after he tested positive yet again for cocaine. This was Straw's third time - he had been suspended twice before for using cocaine - and probably the end of his career. He's 38, which is old for baseball, but more than that, he's clearly an addict. That means he should have lengthy treatment, probably a lock-up. Mnookin agreed. I had my Strawberry file with me in L.A. I had been intending to do a column on him because I was struck by the outrage when he failed the recent drug test. In New York, the papers quoted fans who dismissed Strawberry with contempt. Many sports writers expressed similar views, and when washingtonpost.com asked its readers for their opinion, it was more of the same. "He's had enough chances," wrote one fan. "Three strikes and you're out," said another. This was indeed Strawberry's third strike. He had been suspended in 1995 for 60 days and yet again last year for 120 days. Both suspensions were long enough for him to detox, but way short of what's needed to stay clean - - for the addict to learn what compels him to use drugs in the first place. With Strawberry, that compulsion must have been all-powerful. He is deeply in debt, his wife is pregnant, and he's nearing the end of his career. Yet he used cocaine anyway - even though he knew he would be tested. What compels someone to do something like that? For the answer, go to Mnookin's article. "Within a week of trying pot, I was smoking it every day," he wrote. That's not the case for most people. They can take pot or leave it. But for the addict-in-waiting, the experience is different, transforming. Within a year, Mnookin was using just about every drug imaginable and boozing it up as well. In his case, the urge to write eventually returned. He got himself to a treatment center and stayed for three months. But Strawberry never hit bottom, and his addiction apparently did not interfere with his ball playing. The result was that nothing - and no one - compelled him to seek extended treatment. "He needed to face the way he feels about himself that causes him to do drugs," said Dr. Mitchell Rosenthal, the president of New York's Phoenix House, a treatment center. Rosenthal has no firsthand knowledge of Strawberry, but he's been treating - and mostly curing - addicts for many years. In general, he recommends a year's treatment for tough cases. Baseball and Strawberry were willing to settle for far less. They had a game to play. Strawberry always vowed he would stay clean. No doubt he meant it. But life intervened, and for reasons he probably does not yet understand, he used cocaine. This is the power of addiction. Mnookin was so desperate to get off heroin that he tried crack as a replacement addiction. "I ended up smoking pieces of linoleum I carved from my kitchen floor," he wrote. He hoped bits of crack had stuck in the tiles. At one time, we were admonished not to blame the victim. A bit later, we were given permission to do so. The welfare recipient, the unemployed had only themselves to blame for their plight. Mostly, I agree. A person ought to be accountable for his actions. But addiction is a different matter. You don't choose to smoke linoleum. You don't choose to risk death by overdose. The word "choose" is meaningless in these cases. Yet all of baseball came down on Strawberry. The fans acted as if he had let them down, instead of himself and his family. They blamed only him for his plight and not professional baseball as well. But baseball chose - there's the correct usage - to let him play. It did not compel him to go into extended treatment. Maybe baseball should hire Mnookin. He knows that a cure takes the one thing neither Strawberry nor baseball could afford - time. Now Strawberry's got nothing but. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D