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Friday, October 26, 2007

He lost a $25,000 bet: Chewing tobacco addiction

Red Sox Manager Terry Francona was seen in last night's World Series baseball game spitting five times and what clearly looked like brown tobacco juice emerged three times. He knows he has a problem: he lost a $25,000 bet that he could kick his habit by the end of the season. Francona appeared to switch to gum last night.

Watching Francona's toxic brown spit should spur Major League Baseball into a vigorous campaign against chewing tobacco. Joe Garagiola, who has spoken to major leaguers and amateur players about the risks of chewing tobacco, said yesterday that Francona's parents had asked him to talk to their son about his addiction. Garagiola said his message is that chewing tobacco is addictive, causes oral cancer and can cost you your life. "If I were to talk to Terry, I'd tell him to think seriously after the World Series about getting help," he said. "I know a good place, like the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota."

Advice to nervous members of Red Sox Nation: Chew sugarless gum for the tension, and warn your tobacco-chewing friends about the dangers.

Read another of our baseball stories, or read Richard Sandomir’s source story in today’s New York Times.

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