1. Rondell White
Quotes from Mitchell Report:
"Rondell White is an outfielder who has played for seven teams in Major League Baseball from 1993 to the present, the Montreal Expos (8 seasons), Chicago Cubs (parts of 2 seasons), New York Yankees (1 season), Kansas City Royals (part of 1 season), San Diego Padres (part of 1 season), Detroit Tigers (2 seasons), and Minnesota Twins (2 seasons)."
"According to [Kirk] Radomski, White started buying performance enhancing substances from him in 2000. White bought both human growth hormone and Deca-Durabolin."

Here is one of the seven checks that was used in the report as evidence of a connection between Kirk Randomski and Rondell White.
2. Chuck Knoblauch
Quotes from Mitchell Report:
"Chuck Knoblauch played as an infielder for three teams in Major League Baseball from 1991 to 2002, the Minnesota Twins (7 seasons), New York Yankees (4 seasons), and Kansas City Royals (1 season)."
"Knoblauch played for the Yankees during 2000 and 2001, the two years when
[Brian] McNamee served as the Yankees' assistant strength coach. McNamee provided personal
training services to Knoblauch."
3. Denny Neagle
Quotes from Mitchell Report:
"Denny Neagle pitched for six teams in Major League Baseball between 1991 and
2003, the Minnesota Twins (1 season), Pittsburgh Pirates (5 seasons), Atlanta Braves
(3 seasons), Cincinnati Reds (2 seasons), New York Yankees (part of 1 season), and Colorado
Rockies (3 seasons)."
"[Kirk] Radomski said he met Neagle at a club in New York City in 2000 when Neagle played for the Yankees. After they met, Neagle called Radomski 'looking for HGH.' "
4. Chad Allen
Quotes from Mitchell Report:
"Chad Allen is an outfielder who played with four teams in Major League Baseball between 1999 and 2005, the Minnesota Twins, Cleveland Indians, Florida Marlins, and Texas Rangers."
"Radomski believed he made between three and five sales to Allen involving Winstrol, testosterone, and Deca-Durabolin."
5. Daniel Naulty
Quotes from mitchell Report:
"Daniel Naulty pitched for two teams in Major League Baseball from 1996 to 1999, the Minnesota Twins and the New York Yankees."
"We contacted Naulty as part of our effort to interview former players. During his telephone interview, Naulty admitted to using steroids, on and off, for seven years, and human growth hormone for one year."
"Naulty said that he went 'from an A-ball pitcher to a major league prospect in a matter of two years.' "
Other Twins references in the Mitchell Report:
"In 2000 or 2001, a visiting clubhouse manager working for the Minnesota Twins found a used syringe on top of a trash can in the visitors' clubhouse. He brought the incident to the attention of the Twins manager, Tom Kelly, who told him to dispose of the syringe and to be careful doing so. Kelly confirmed the incident and said that he did not report the incident to anyone because he felt it "wasn't any of [his] business" and that it was the other team's issue to address."
"Judge Larry M. Boyle, wrote a letter to Commissioner Selig...According to the letter, [Greg] Anderson told Boyle that Sheffield's team was playing the Twins that week and Anderson had "come to work with him."...Anderson confirmed to Boyle that his "best client" was Barry Bonds."
Misc:
Juan Rincon was not named in the report but he did test positive for prohibited substances in 2005 and served a ten game suspension.
'Amazingly' all but, Chad Allen played for the New York Yankees, probably because Kirk Radomski was employed by the NYM, and Brian McNamee worked with the NYY. These two seem to be the two main sources in the report. Without these two, this report would be awfully thin.
It almost seems fitting. On the last weekend of the college football season until the bowl games, both the number one and number two teams lost. Missouri lost to Oklahoma 38-17, but the Sooners were expected to win, at least by me. West Virgina lost Pittsburgh, now that is shocking. The top two teams should never lose in the same week. This year, it has happened twice in two weeks. This is the year for a playoff, but unfortunately there won't be one.