Boddicker said trainers on the team regularly administered shots of the vitamin, countering testimony by prosecution witnesses that vitamin B-12 was kept under lock and that McNamee would not have had authority to administer it.
Joe Angel, a broadcaster for the Baltimore Orioles, also shored up Clemens defense, testifying he saw Clemens at a golf course on the day of a 1998 pool party at the Florida home of Jose Canseco, a Toronto Blue Jays teammate of Clemens and an admitted steroid user.
Prosecutors charge that Clemens lied to Congress when he testified in 2008 that he did not attend the party.
CLEMENS' SUCCESS BY HARD WORK
Clemens' lawyers have tried to depict him as a hard-working pitcher whose stunning late-career success was the product of dedication and smart pitching, not performance-enhancing drugs.
Clemens won his seventh Cy Young Award in 2004 - the summer he turned 42 - in his first season with the Houston Astros, after ending the season with an impressive 2.98 earned run average.
Rohan Baichu, a former Yankees massage therapist and another defense witness, testified that he did not notice changes in Clemens' body in the several years he gave him deep tissue massages.
Defense attorney Rusty Hardin has argued that if Clemens had used steroids he would have shown some side effects such as acne, weight gain or enlarged breasts.
Hardin said the defense team could rest their case on Friday, allowing jury deliberations to begin next week. The trial is now in its eighth week.
Clemens' first trial ended last year in a mistrial.
(Reporting By Lily Kuo; Editing by Cynthia Osterman and Vicki Allen)
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