Move over Jose Canseco, you're not the only author with juice in this town! Kirk Radomski, the former Mets clubhouse assistant whose work as a steroid supplier fueled much of the Mitchell Report, is going to get six figures to write a tell-all book. I assumed he would have told all to Mitchell & Co., since he was doing it to avoid jail time, but his agent promises juicy secrets. "Radomski's estimation is that 80 percent to 90 percent of players used performance enhancers," said Waxman. "He's going to tell about guys who would do too much of the stuff when he told them not to. He said the memoir would have "new info on Roger Clemens," but he declined to be more specific.If Radomski's got more names and substantive proof, a la the checks featured in the Report, it's hard to imagine he wouldn't have given them up already. Even if there are a few more names, how could he possibly have a book's worth of information to add to what we already know?
I'm thinking not too much which will leave a lot of time to discuss auto detailing, his current profession, and other anecdotes from the clubhouse assistant trade. That new info on Roger Clemens? He likes cream in his coffee! I'm looking forward to the chapter that sheds some light on Frank Viola's moustache care techniques. That soup-strainer couldn't have been all-natural and I'd like to know just what he was using.

























