The accident scene was eerily similar to his reckless existence. Steven Roy Howe lay dead on a California highway with his late-model vehicle resting on top of him; a witness told cops that Howe's truck simply drifted off the roadway.
When I first read of the death of this once promising athlete from Michigan in 2006, I immediately concluded that the last few moments of the 48-year-old's life ironically mirrored the Steve Howe that the baseball world knew all too well.
He died in the fast lane, rolling and spinning out of control, while not being able to help himself. Sadly, it was reminiscent of his days in baseball, when cocaine and alcohol destroyed a "can't-miss" lefty—a guy who once had it all.
When I first saw Steve Howe pitch in 1980, I was amazed by this cocky kid's fearless, exuberant approach amid a veteran Dodgers team fighting for a division title. At age 22, were there ANY limits on what he could do? He set a Dodgers rookie save record (17) and won seven games in relief—giving up only ONE home run in almost 85 innings.
Sure, he could throw incredibly hard at times (and possessed a WICKED slider), but he wasn't a strikeout pitcher; the key to his success was how much his ball MOVED in the strike zone—often sending opposing batters back to the dugout shaking their heads in frustrated amazement.
He won the Rookie of the Year Award in '80; he'd nail down the final out against the Yankees in the 1981 World Series as the Dodgers became world champions. An All-Star year in 1982 would follow. No limits/roadblocks, right?
Just one: addiction.
As cocaine reeled in Howe sometime during the early ‘80s, it soon became clear that the man was not the same pitcher—or PERSON—he once was. He was suspended for the entire '84 season and pitched to inflated ERAs of 5.49 and 4.31 in '85 (for L.A. and Minnesota) and '87 (Texas) respectively; '86 was lost due to a relapse.
His well-documented seven suspensions from baseball would often be the subject of debate regarding how many chances one person should get to clean up his/her act. Yes, he DID show signs of his former brilliance at times from 1991-1996 with the Yankees, but he never stayed clean for long; a 6.35 ERA over 25 games in '96 was Howe's ticket out of baseball.
A gun possession charge followed. Relapses, drug possession charges, bans, countless rehabs; pick up a sports section from the mid ‘80s to the mid ‘90s, and you read about Steve Howe in the police briefs. I remember seeing a close-up picture of Howe while he was attempting a comeback in 1997 with Sioux Falls of the Independent League. Quite frankly, it looked like death had already encompassed him; it could have been used for a poster reading "Cocaine Kills."
Call me selfish. I feel cheated that I never got to see the Steve Howe I had once envisioned: a non-addicted, passionate lefty whose only vice would be overthrowing at times. Hell, EVERY baseball fan should be saddened by the tragic story of a man whose potential once knew no bounds.
"If it wasn't for the cocaine, he probably would have been a Hall of Fame pitcher," said Dodgers former bullpen coach Mark Cresse, speaking recently in the Palm Springs Desert Sun. No argument here—he was THAT good. The "what might have been" cliché will surely always come up in conversations revolving around a former baby-faced phenom named Steve Howe.
Whether drugs played a role in his death or not, it's almost as though fate finally caught up with Howe—like it HAD to happen this way. Howe himself would have been the first to say that he was lucky to have seen his 40th birthday. The TRUE sadness here lies in the fact that Steve Howe was a very giving person; despite being enveloped by addiction for a good portion of his life, he enjoyed helping people—and did just that. Sadly, he just couldn't help himself.
The hope here is that the death of Steve Howe will somehow save the lives of others by bringing additional attention to the scourge of addiction—regardless of HOW he died. Perhaps fans and Howe’s family members can take solace in the fact that he may now finally have the peace that surely eluded him during his short, troubled life.
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