WHAT PROBERS NEED TO ASK

 
Roger Clemens has thrown thousands of pitches - but never one quite like this.On Wednesday, Clemens will sit, under oath, in front of a congressional committee and fight to save his reputation and legacy.Members of the House Committee on Oversight... [link]

Tags:

Related Stories
3

Hearing of Special Interest to an I.R.S. Special Agent

Jeff Novitzky, who has led a five-and-a-half-year investigation into steroids in professional sports, is expected to attend hear Roger Clemens testify on Wednesday.
1

Another one named by McNamee

An interesting twist on the Clemens steroid saga
1

Justice should relieve Congress

Congressman Darrell Issa, the only member of the House Oversight Committee known to have personally attended Roger Clemens'deposition, said he expects the committee to pass the matter over to the Justice Department.
2

Lupica: Clemens turns it into joke

These are no longer hearings anybody can take seriously. They have turned into nothing more than a show, and occasionally a clown show, Roger Clemens going door-to-door the way guys used to with vacuum cleaners.
1

Clemens: I can prove McNamee is wrong

Brian McNamee says that Roger Clemens, then with the Blue Jays, discussed steroid use with Jose Canseco at a party in 1998. Clemens says he can prove he didn't attend the party.
Related Blog Posts
SOX1FANHas Clemens Dug Himself A Legal Hole? Former Trainer Reportedly Supplied Congress With Physical Evidence
This week, information was leaked that Brian McNamee, Roger Clemens former trainer, has provided physical evidence to the federal government that will support his allegations of steroid / HGH use by Clemens. According to an unnamed source, McNamee ...
The Victoria TimesAudience Participation: Do you think Clemens did it?
Usually in circumstances such as the one Roger Clemens finds himself in, I tend to believe most of the accusations against athletes, because I know how competitive they tend to be. They are pissed off if they fail, whether that failure be on the field ...
Five Tool Tool - The Sports Blog That Loves You BackThis Just In: Roger Clemens Makes Decent People Spit
H/t, Deadspin, tipping SI, who found this on Debbie Clemens' Web site... Roger came to me one day and told me that we had been asked to do a photo shoot for Sports Illustrated. I had major anxiety! I was a 39-year-old mother of 4! Once I realized ...
Diamond ThoughtsMore Holes in McNamee's Story
Yahoo is reporting that Roger Clemens lawyers have launched the most devastating hole into McNamee's story about him offering proof that he was never at Jose Canseco's party that was supposed to be the party that started all of this.
Yankee GM BlogMore Proof MacNamee is a Liar?
In his interview with investigators from the Mitchell Report, Brian MacNamee stated that Roger Clemes first asked him about steroids after speaking with Jose Canseco at a luncheon at Jose's house in 1998. Yesterday, Roger's lawyers stated that they ...
Related News Articles
Lawyer: There's proof Rocket wasn't at Canseco party
A lawyer for Roger Clemens said Saturday the pitcher can prove he didn't attend a June 1998 party at Jose Canseco's home described by Brian McNamee in the Mitchell Report. According to McNamee, Clemens first raised the subject of steroids not long ...
Lawyer: Clemens wasn't at Conseco party
WASHINGTON (AP) -- A lawyer for Roger Clemens said Saturday the pitcher can prove he didn't attend a...
Radomski says he believes McNamee
Kirk Radomski, the former New York Mets clubhouse attendant who supplied Brian McNamee with steroids, said he has "no doubt" the trainer told the truth in claiming he injected Roger Clemens with performance-enhancing drugs.
Rocket's reps have their own proof
WASHINGTON - A lawyer for Roger Clemens said yesterday the pitcher can prove he didn't attend a June 1998 party at Jose Canseco's home described by Brian McNamee...
Lawyer: Clemens wasn't at Canseco party
A lawyer for Roger Clemens said Saturday the pitcher can prove he didn't attend a June 1998 party at Jose Canseco's home described by Brian McNamee in the Mitchell Report.