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Leaks have led to Arod's downfall..........
and our U.S. has gone
waterboard on Bonds
Photo
by Julie Jacobson-AP
Photo by
Mike Zarilli-Getty |
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Everyone wants to weigh in on the Arod situation
and I’m no
different, I guess, but why do I feel as if I broke into his bedroom?
It just really stinks that anybody gets
smeared as Arod has been for taking a drug test that was supposed to be
anonymous.
That really bothers me.
And I’m a Yankee-hater most of the time.
Major League Baseball botched the
steroids situation from
the very start. If anybody pays for
their mistakes, it should be MLB. If any
individual needs to be vilified, look to Bud Selig.
Look to the Players Union too and its
leadership. Their strategies, if they could be called that in their
inanity,
have failed. And now everybody will pay.
The Yankees will pay the most.
As a Mets fan, and often-times Yankee-hater,
life is sweet.
But I wish I knew for
sure my favorite Mets were clean.
I
don’t.
A couple of things make Arod’s
situation unique. For one, it
seems as if steroids didn’t really help him that much, as opposed to
Bonds and
Clemens and Sosa, for example. His performance may have improved as he
weaned
himself off them. You could say Arod
botched steroids use.
A quick look at his career stats would seem to bear this
out, that is, unless he also took steroids throughout the entire period
from
about 2003 and on.
Just taking a look at
OPS, the best measure of hitting and slugging, his numbers were as
follows from
2003 through 2008: .995, .888, 1.031, .914, 1.067, and .965.
His wondrous 2007 season, in which he
batted .314, with 54
homers and 156 rbi’s is suspect, of course, because we don’t really
know when
he stopped taking steroids. But I do
know that he slimmed down a lot from 2006 to 2007.
I can recall thinking Arod looked like a
blown-up softball player in 2006. And
his performance suffered in that year, batting only .290 with 35 homers
(but he
still had 121 rbi’s).
Interestingly enough, from his first full season with
Seattle in 1996
through
and including the year 2000, his OPS numbers were: 1.045, .846, .920,
.943 and
1.026.
He’s really been pretty
consistent throughout his career, and it’s really difficult to isolate
any
drastically improved performance in a steroids year.
So what does all this mean? Baseball has been incredibly naïve AT
BEST
about the entire steroids
question. You’d think that they’d have a
greater sense of social responsibility than they have shown. (Talk about naïve, right)?
If there is a crisis for baseball, it’s one of
credibility.
A sport that absolutely
obsesses about statistics suddenly finds itself without any meaningful
ones.
But, if there is a crisis for the
rest of us, it’s the answer to the question “is nothing sacred”?
For it would appear that nothing is. The records aren’t sacred and our freedoms
aren’t either. Confidentiality? Privacy? Forget
about it. The
only good
advice you can impart to your children is “don’t do anything wrong, and
if you
do, admit nothing and don’t submit your sacred body to tests of any
kind, drugs,
DNA, or whatever comes next.
The U.S. Government has proven its heavy-handedness in
its
prosecution of Barry Bonds.
Greg
Anderson, Bonds’s trainer, went to jail for a year or so because he
wouldn’t
testify against his friend.
The
U.S.
threatened
his wife and even his mother.
I still
can’t believe I’m now rooting for Barry Bonds.
But
only to a certain extent.
I don’t think Bonds should go to jail,
or even the hateful
Clemens. But, for as long as they refuse
to admit their cheating, for all these guys were cheaters, they should
get no
Hall of Fame consideration. Their
records shouldn’t stand for their steroids years. Throw
them out.
For those who have admitted their
wrongdoing, I’d say they
should go on as before, and if their non-steroid years stats should
prove
Hall-worthy, so be it. Translation: guys
like McGuire, Bonds, Sosa and Clemens should just forget the Hall. But if Arod should just come clean about his
involvement, let’s just subtract the wonder years and consider the
remaining
statistics.
I don’t think that’s so difficult.
Hall
voters can figure that out.
They’ll vote
their consciences.
And it’s hard to have a
clear conscience
about someone who just continues to deny when all indications are
otherwise.
Giambi and Pettite admitted their
usage and life goes on for
them. It’s somewhat disturbing that none
of the true superstars have tried to come clean. But,
if they did, they should get a break.
As a Mets fan, I must admit nothing makes me happier than
to
think the Yankees made a very stupid 300 million dollar investment.
And they can listen to the jeering Arod will
take for a decade.
Cool.
But, then again, what if some of the
other hundred or so
names are some of my beloved Mets? It
makes you think.
But what I think more than anything is that this country
is
beginning to stink out loud.
Bush did a
lot to kill our reputation.
The Bonds
perjury hearing is in a way quite like the Abu Ghraib torturing of
prisoners.
It’s heavy-handed and
absolutely unnecessary.
Call off the Bonds hearings. He’s finished anyway. He
was
always a mean guy and that’s the way he’ll be remembered.
Hall of Fame?
I don’t
think it matters much to most people, except as a curiosity, another
interesting factoid in sports, that, let’s face it, is in itself just a
curiosity. Who are the best players in the land and what’s the best
team of
players in the land?
Which player called safe says, “but
no, I was really
out.” Every competitor, at least the
rabid ones, will seek out every advantage. If
steroid usage weren’t dangerous, I’d say to just
forget about it. But it is dangerous.
But not as dangerous as are invasions
of privacy and
violations of ethics. Clean up baseball
but clean up our government as well.
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