Rod Scurry
Rodney Grant Scurry was an American professional baseball pitcher. Scurry played for eight seasons and was the first Major League Baseball player directly linked to the Pittsburgh drug trials that dogged baseball during the mid-1980s. In 1992, Scurry died of a cocaine-induced heart attack.
Career
Pittsburgh Pirates
Scurry was born in Sacramento, California and was drafted by the Pittsburgh Pirates with the eleventh overall pick in the 1974 Major League Baseball draft. He spent six seasons in the Pirates' farm system, compiling a 37–51 record and 3.89 earned run average, before making the major league club out of Spring training.Though he had been used primarily as a starter in the minors, Scurry spent most of his major-league career as a relief pitcher. The only exception was when he was added to the Pirates' starting rotation. He won his first start on April 19, giving up four hits and no earned runs in seven innings pitched.
From there, Scurry went 0–2 with a 5.79 ERA over his next four starts, and he was returned to the bullpen. He made two more starts in August, winning one and losing one. For the season, he went 4–5 with a 3.77 ERA and seven saves. In, he appeared in 76 games for the Pirates and went 4–5 with a 1.74 ERA and fourteen saves.
On September 14, 1985, his contract was sold to the New York Yankees.
New York Yankees
During his time with the Yankees, Scurry went 2–2 with a 3.46 ERA in 36 appearances over a season plus with the team. He was released shortly before the season. He signed with the San Francisco Giants in June and spent the entire season with their triple-A affiliate.Seattle Mariners
During Spring training, the Giants dealt Scurry to the Seattle Mariners for a player to be named later. After starting the season in the minors, he joined the team in May and went 0–2 with a 4.02 ERA and two saves. The Mariners released Scurry on December 21, 1988. A day later, he was arrested for buying crack cocaine at a Reno, Nevada crack house.Personal life and death
On October 29, 1992, responding to a call from a neighbor, the Washoe County, Nevada Sheriff's Department found Scurry outside his home complaining that snakes were in his home, crawling on him and biting him. He became violent and stopped breathing when deputies attempted to put handcuffs and leg restraints on him. He was taken to Washoe Medical Center and remained on life-support systems until his death a week later. His official cause of death was a cocaine-related heart attack.His son, Rod, Jr., was a pitcher in the Colorado Rockies organization.