News

Ken Caminiti isn’t feeling good. Sound familiar?Don’t fret. It’s just flulike symptoms this time, which is a far cry from the acute sinus infection that hospitalized him last spring and got ...
Ken Caminiti, who recently told Sports Illustrated that more than half of Major League Baseball players use steroids, says his comments were misconstrued and taken out of context.
Ken Caminiti now travels with what he calls his “nice little phone book.” An Alcoholics Anonymous directory of meeting times and places. A listing of sponsors and counselors.
Five days before he died on Oct. 10, 41-year-old Ken Caminiti walked out of the Harris County Jail in Houston, where he had spent four weeks for violating his probation by testing positive for drugs.
Ken Caminiti, the National League's Most Valuable Player in 1996, says he won the award while on steroids and that at least half of major-leaguers use the drugs.
Days before he died in The Bronx, former baseball slugger Ken Caminiti was upbeat, ready to leave a Houston lockup with plans for a brighter future. The recovering addict hoped to secure a coaching… ...
Ken Caminiti, a commoner of a ballplayer if ever there was one, sat there across from me at his Houston-area home in May of 2002 and without regret dared essentially to expose one of the biggest ...
While Caminiti discussed his use of steroids 20 years ago for Sports Illustrated, the truth — that his steroids regimen was facilitated by a childhood friend, Dave Moretti — has never been ...
PORT CHARLOTTE, Fla. — Ken Caminiti remains in recovery, even though his physical injuries have healed. After a relapse with alcoholism that landed him in a treatment program and splintered his ...
Ken Caminiti was taken in the third round of the 1984 draft out of San Jose State, made his MLB debut with the Houston Astros in 1987, became a National League Gold Glove third baseman, and, in ...
Five days before he died on Oct. 10, 41-year-old Ken Caminiti walked out of the Harris County Jail in Houston, where he had spent four weeks for violating his probation by testing positive for drugs.