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MLB catcher named in Al Jazeera report suspended for drug violation

Former catcher Taylor Teagarden. AP Photo/Jeff Roberson

NEW YORK – Former major league catcher Taylor Teagarden, among the athletes accused of using performance-enhancing drugs in a December report by Al Jazeera, was suspended for 80 games on Friday by Major League Baseball.

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In its announcement, MLB said Teagarden violated the big league drug program but did not specify the nature of the violation.

Al Jazeera accused several high-profile athletes of using performance-enhancing drugs, among them Philadelphia first baseman Ryan Howard, Washington first baseman Ryan Zimmerman and then Denver quarterback Peyton Manning. Manning denied the allegations, and William Burck, a lawyer for Howard and Zimmerman, called the charges “outright lies.”

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READ MORE: Peyton Manning furious over report that he used HGH in 2011

Al Jazeera broadcast video of Teagarden talking about taking a banned substance called Delta-2.

Greg Bouris, a spokesman for the Major League Baseball Players Association, said the union had no comment. Teagarden’s lawyer, David Cornwell, did not respond to an email seeking comment.

A member of Texas’ 2005 NCAA championship team, Teagarden was selected by the Texas Rangers in the third round of that year’s amateur draft. He has a .202 batting average with 21 homers and 70 RBIs in eight seasons with the Rangers (2008-11), Baltimore (2012-13), the New York Mets (2014) and the Chicago Cubs (2015).

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The 32-year-old Teagarden played eight games with the Cubs last year and spent the majority of the season at Triple-A Iowa. He became a free agent in October when he refused an outright assignment to the minors.

WATCH: Al Jazeera Investigates – The Dark Side

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