0 Page 10 - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, November 10, 1988 EX- WOLVERINE CLEANS UP AFTER BOUT WITH DRUGS Howe gets a save on life BY JON SAMNICK The Los Angeles Dodgers just won their first World Championship in seven years. Conspicuously absent from this year's team is former Michigan star Steve Howe. Why is Michigan's best-ever left-handed pitcher watching the game on television this year? The answer is an unfortunate but all too prevalent one. From 1977 through 1979 Steve Howe was 27-8 with an incredible 1.80 ERA, the second best mark ever at Michigan. In his last year he was 7-2 with a 1.78 ERA. He lost his only conference game of his career in his final start against Michigan State. A high school All-American from Clarkston, Mich., Howe gained All- Big Ten honors as a sophomore and was All-Big Ten and All-American as a junior. AFTER he and teammates Rich Leach and Steve Perry were selected in the first round of the 1979 baseball draft, Howe had a short but impressive stay with San Antonio in Double A. He then moved up to the big time with the Los Angeles Dodgers. Alumni Update In 1980, Howe was the National League Rookie-of-the-Year, the second in a series of four the Dodgers would win. And in 1981, the Dodgers won the World Series behind his relief pitching. But he didn't make it to this year's World Series. In 1984, Steve Howe announced that he had a drug problem and he was suspended from baseball for the entire year. He's been trying to make his way back ever since. "I ALWAYS dominated from the time I started playing. People were always telling me as long as I could remember, that I had a good chance to play in the bigs." Next he was being labeled throughout the baseball world as a bad influence. "I'll never be cured," Howe said. "You just have to live your life day to day." It was not until Howe was released for a third time by a major league club that he realized that if he didn't clean himself up, he would tear his family further apart and would possibly die. "It's a. disease and it's not just personal, it's a family disease also." Drugs are commonplace in sports, but Howe was the first star in his prime to come public with his disease. "Steve concealed his problem well, but then again I didn't look for it. I was too busy playing baseball," said future Hall-of-Famer Steve Garvey, a former teammate of Howe's. PERHAPS HOWE'S problems were the result of playing in a high- profile city like Los Angeles. Or perhaps they were the result of being a cocky young rookie who couldn't handle the pressures of the big leagues. Moby Benedict, who coached Michigan's baseball team for 21 years and retired after Howe's last season said, "L.A. may have been the worst place for him. If he had played somewhere else he might've had less distractions." Garvey, who played at Michigan State before making the pros, disagreed. "L.A. didn't do him in. Steve had some personal inner psychological problems. He was very cocky that first spring training when I made a concerted effort to go up to him and say hello because we both played in the Big Ten. He was very cocky and so he didn't endear himself to a lot of people." Howe has his own opinion. "My problem was with experimentation. It started in high school, continued in college, and stayed with me when I got to the pros. Alcohol and chemicals are progressive diseases and so my problems just got worse. It would've happened anywhere that I went. Athletes get paid high salaries. People think I planned it but I didn't." As for his attitude, "I was a good teammate and you can't succeed unless you have enthusiasm." Benedict agreed. "Absolutely he was cocky, you accept that. He backed up his statements, though. He got along well with his teammates, and like (Hall-of-Fame Dodger pitchers) Sandy Koufax and Don Drysdale, when he pitched, you won." SINCE HIS RELEASE from the Texas Rangers in 1987, Howe has become serious about rehabilitating himself. Howe's clean, but he has to live with having made it and lost it. The chances of making the pros are slim. The changes of becoming a star are even smaller, but Howe and others ignore these odds and continue to involve themselves with drugs. However, Howe wouldn't change a thing. "I wouldn't have done anything differently. I gained a lot of experience." Howe just finished a season at Triple A in the Mexican League and has a book due out in March titled "Between the Lines." He will spend his off- season working near his home and talking to schoolchildren about drug abuse. He won't tell people not to use drugs - that is their choice - but he'll do whatever he can. "I'll help anyone that wants help. I'd pick someone up at 3:30 in the morning if that's what has to be done, but you can't force yourself on people." Steve Howe is down but not out. He had lost it all and now he is trying not to leave a drug legacy to the sport he has spent the better part of his life playing. He hopes to end up back in the majors with Texas or with the Dodgers, but he would be happy with any team that wants to take a chance on someone who has had more than his share. CLASSIFIED ADS! Call 764-0557 a KAREN HANDELMAN/Doily Dunkin' Bill At yesterday's Michigan men's basketball media day, coach Bill Frieder displayed his dunking skills - well sort of. The rim was only a foot over his head. Frieder dwelled on the lack of a second guard to play opposite Rumeal Robinson, while showing off his troops for the upcoming season. The team opens Wednesday against Yugoslavia. 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