If you watched the 2005 congressional hearings on steroids in baseball, you might remember Don Hooton. In a room full of glamorous frauds and executive-level deniers, he stood out as the ordinary guy who had the guts to tell the truth.
And what a painful truth it was. The grieving father cut through all the obfuscation of those hearings with his tearful tale of how steroids tore a hole through his Texas family. His 17-year-old son Taylor, a high school pitcher, made a noose from a belt and hung himself from his bedroom door while trapped in a depression related to steroids use.
Don Hooton stood among the Major League Baseball glitterati and Washington power brokers again last week for the unveiling of the Mitchell Report. While most discussion of the report centers on two kinds of stars -- those whose names showed up in its pages and those that might be placed next to tainted records -- Hooton continues to make the case that it's really about the messages we're sending to the next generation.
"I don't think most players have heard stories like Taylor's," said Hooton, who created the Taylor Hooton Foundation to raise awareness of the dangers of performance-enhancing drugs. "They need to look into the face of a dad who lost his kid and realize they have a responsibility as role models to kids.
"I'm very pleased Senator Mitchell understands what's really at stake here. He thinks the situation with kids is at least as important, if not more important, than worrying about putting an asterisk next to a record."
There remains a major disconnect in this country when it comes to the intersection of kids, athletes and behavior. Athletes say they shouldn't be role models, even though their sports are marketed to children who inevitably look up to them. Parents tout the values of sportsmanship and fair play, then take their kids to games to cheer stars who use drugs or abuse their spouses.
Such mixed messages have helped performance-enhancing drug use trickle down from pro clubhouses to high school locker rooms. The Centers for Disease Control reported that nearly 5 percent of high school students surveyed in 2005 said they had used steroids. In the 2006 Monitoring the Future survey, funded by the National Institute on Drug Abuse, 1.8 percent of high-school sophomores and 2.7 percent of seniors admitted trying steroids.
About two months ago, Hooton met with Mitchell. The father told the former senator how steroids destroyed his son and others; Hooton said that widened Mitchell's focus and drove home the message that baseball's problem is actually everyone's problem.