Gotta Love the Juice (not OJ)
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I received a recommendation for my next post but it was another environmental topic so it is on hold. Instead, I’m going to discuss something far more important, the performance enhancing drug scandal in major league baseball. Before you dismiss such a topic as irrelevant, keep in mind that there is a good chance that your kids do or will idolize these guys and attempt to replicate their actions. When I was a kid I knew and mimicked the batting stances of all my favorite players. Good thing I didn’t know they were on the juice or I would weigh 200 pounds now and have a useless liver.
First, I’m glad that Mitchell named players in his report because it makes the whole thing seem much more real. When you flip through page after page of cancelled checks written by players to admitted drug dealers it really drives the point home. Naming the players also shows how little integrity there is in people in the public realm. Half the guys in the report previously denied ever using the stuff. It supports what I’ve always said about celebrities of any kind, the public thinks they know the character of these people based on an attachment they built up through watching TV but the reality is that they can be (and usually are) completely different people offscreen. Look at Mel Gibson. Or any politician. Martha Stewart!! We don’t know anything about these people. They play nice on TV to get big money contracts. Simple as that. And, of course, greed is really the root of this whole scandal. It is just like the mortgage/housing market. When everything is going great there is nobody to step up and say “no.” Owners, players, agents, media, merchandisers, and numerous others had everything to gain with the comeback of baseball after the strike. And it seemed no one had anything to lose. Until, the dust settled and the good times came to an end with a 409 page report. Now there are at least 80 players and a couple drug dealers that have certainly lost a lot. Notice where they fall on the food chain of major league baseball. The owners still have all their profits from the past 10 years of record attendance to go with the record number of homeruns. At least in the mortgage implosion the banks and the consumers both have egg on their face. The real irony here is that when Canseco made these accusations 5 years ago, the players ripped him to shreds and said he was a bitter liar with no integrity. He may too have been motivated by money but he certainly wasn’t the liar in all this.
I find it hard to believe that the pitchers who were getting knocked around year after year still never spoke out against the drug use of the position players. What is even harder to believe is that it is apparent that hundreds of players used drugs and there are probably less than 10 to this day that admit it. I mean come on, have some sack. I heard a Detroit News columnist and Hall of Fame voter comment that since there was no positive drug tests that he is going to assume innocence for all players. How did this guy get a vote for the Hall of Fame? What about the eyewitness testimony, cancelled checks, and the completely unexplainable statistical anomaly for homeruns in the past decade? They mean nothing? Hello, MLB didn’t even test for steroids until 3 years ago so where does he think Mitchell was going to get positive tests. And HGH isn’t even detectable. Which leads to the big question, what happens now? They still can’t test for HGH, unless the players’ union agrees to blood tests. I guess we can only hope that they’ve been embarrassed enough to agree to it.
Sorry the post is so long but I love baseball and I hate gutless liars so I had to write something. Maybe this will scare away some of the "non-affiliated" commenters we've had lately.
13 Comments:
Do you think the owners should be fined or have their profits cut in some way? As you point out, they're still getting rich and will probably come out of all this unharmed.
The funny thing is, the Mitchell report has no basis in law and merely demonstrates what he was able to find out without subpeona power. As a result, this is just the tip of the iceberg in terms of offenders and, therefore, I feel it would be somewhat unjust to dish out penalties to anyone based on the report. It was a tainted era, history will always note that fact, and now they just have to clean it up going forward.
Also, figuring out true profits for baseball teams is impossible because they all cook the books.
I say Phelan for President in 2016!!!
TBone
Wheeling, IL
You're lucky you didn't say that before I talked to the investigator or else I would have had to told her that you were apparently using drugs.
I think that, regardless of what political significance the Mitchell Report actually has, the repercussions of this research on the fans will prove far more detrimental. One has to remember that many of these players play not only for the salary, but also (pardon the cliche) for the love of the game. The fame, the status, the crowds, the hot dogs...Enforcing fines or pay-cuts on the owners and/or even the players, themselves, is merely a slap on the wrist. So, next year I'm going to make 3.5 million per season as opposed to the 4.9 million average that most MLB players earn. I still have my 8 cars, my mansion, my VIP tickets and myself,my kids, my wife, and my mistress are set for life. We're just 2 million less wealthy per season now. Poor me. I can't afford a second yacht for another 2 seasons. If one really wants to make an impact on someone else, he must make it personal. If I were to punish the system, I would make each of the players make a public apology. Not just in press conferences, but in schools. Make them do community service in a sense and do speeches to kids about steroids. Make them put the statistic about steroid usage on their baseball cards, right under their record average. Sometimes you have to remind these guys that they still have a sack (as you put it) by kicking them in it. These guys feed on glory, so strip them of it and make the industry earn it back. There is no monetary value for integrity.
I think the league won't punish them because it (Bud Selig) knows that their reputations and integrity are already shot just by having their names in the report. Just ask Mark McGwire who only got 1/3 of the votes necessary to make the Hall of Fame. So that penalty is already assessed which is the best penalty because like you said, financial penalties are meaningless to these guys.
As far as talking to kids, Clemens was already booked to talk to athletes at a Texas high school about the benefits of training hard and doing it right. I've heard the school may revoke the invite since the Mitchell report. Although Clemens came out today and denied it all. But so did Palmeiro, Pettitte, Sosa, etc, etc.
So many important environmental issues to discuss and you are wasting your time with the baseball steriods scandal? I thought you were interested in important issues of the day, Jonathan. Issues affecting our environment, like Christmas trees.
Which is better, a real Chrismas tree or a fake one? After all, cutting down real trees doesn't seem to be a good idea for our environment. But fake trees are made of - you guessed it - petroleum products!
See this news story for a discussion about the real vs. fake tree dilema:
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,317500,00.html
The link doesn't work but I'll say this much. More Christmas trees come from tree farms and farmers tend to want to make money beyond one year. So I would bet that 90% of Christmas trees farms get replanted when trees are cut down. I don't see much harm in that. It is renewable, oil is not. I say go with the real tree. And then plant two next Spring!!!
And steroids are important too. Believe it or not there are bigger issues out there than even the environment. I can hear the gasps already.
I will not teach my children to idolize sports figures. Instead, I am going to teach them to idolize real heroes, like Al Gore, a true American liberal who is concerned about the environment. But I wonder, does Al have a real tree or a fake tree? Does Al realize fake trees are made from petroleum products? If he does, shouldn't he make a movie about it? I can see it now - "An Inconvenient Christmas."
Hi Jonathan,
Looking forward to your next post. Hope you had a Merry Christmas.
- Kitty
Kitty, what part of the country do you live in and how did you find this blog?
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