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#211 | |||||
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Harry Chiti Fan
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Washington, DC
Posts: 5,872
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Re: Bonds bombshell: Book details slugger's steroid use
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I don't advocate for kicking people out because I don't believe that baseball should be in the practice of revisiting and--by default--making remittances for perceived past wrongs. This is the very reason I say that your continued references to sins committed by players 50 and 60 years ago have no bearing on this discussion. I can't control what they did, I can't control what baseball did. This discussion deals with an active scandal today. This is something baseball CAN deal with, and I want them to deal with it correctly. Quote:
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To your second, I would say that bat corking, ball doctoring, and excessive pine tarring are examples of activities that are banned not out of any health concern, but because of the benefit they provide the executor of said action. Steroids are likely banned due to a combination of both.
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We'll burn that bridge when we get to it. |
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#212 |
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What Me Worry?
Join Date: Apr 2001
Location: Bellefontaine, Ohio
Posts: 26,416
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Re: Bonds bombshell: Book details slugger's steroid use
The MLB heirarchy knew this was going on years ago, and looked the other way. Why? Because guys like Sosa, McGwire, and Bonds, helped to re-invigorate baseball after the mid-90's strike.
Now that it is getting so much exposure and press, everyone is appalled at it? How can we expect the very people who condoned it to now punish the offenders? It'll never happen. MLB is first and foremost gonna cover their butts over this issue. The image of these players has forever been tarnished in the eyes and hearts of those that really count - the fans. ![]() These players, IMO, couldn't stand up next to, nor be compared, to alot of the greats of the game. What bothers me is that Pete Rose is banned from the HOF; but guys like this may be given future consideration. And all because of "technicalities" and vagueness over the rules concerning banned substances, which MLB refused for years to address (until they had to).
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"panic" only comes from having real expectations |
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#213 |
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Big Red Machine
Join Date: Jun 2000
Location: Out Wayne
Posts: 22,365
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Re: Bonds bombshell: Book details slugger's steroid use
No player has an absolute right to be "honored" by selection to the HOF and I have no problem at all in seeing that honor denied to someone who has not respected the game, the fans or his fellow competitors. Bonds and McGwire and Palmiero have their statistics and their money; they do not deserve honors as well.
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"Hey...Dad. Wanna Have A Catch?" Kevin Costner in "Field Of Dreams." |
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#214 |
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Hisssssssss
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Land of the Lost
Posts: 6,984
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Re: Bonds bombshell: Book details slugger's steroid use
Code:
Yachtzee's Continuum of Baseball Evils
Offense Harm to Baseball Harm to Society
Throwing Games Integrity of the game Fraud upon the Public
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The Designated Baseball Welfare Fraud upon the Public ;)
Hitter
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Gambling Puts player/manager in Not to the level of actual fraud,
| a position where his but does raise red flags.
| motives may be questioned.
Steroids Calls individual records Pressures young players trying to
| into question "break in" to jam just about anything
| into their systems to "keep up with
| the Joneses"
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Doctored Ball/ More of a rule to make A traffic violation for
Corked Bat the game safer baseball players
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"I don't classify 'em, I just pacify 'em." - George Foster. |
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#215 | |||
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Playoffs
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Cincinnati, OH
Posts: 6,233
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Re: Bonds bombshell: Book details slugger's steroid use
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Seriously, what do you think the chances are that baseball punishes Bonds for what he did before the testing policy? Does anybody really believe they will punish him? 2) Baseball has set precedent in attempting to revisit history and make remittances for past wrongs by reinstating players long after they were banned. You don't believe they should do it, but they've already done it. Quote:
![]() I'm not throwing any double-standard hypocritical stuff at you. If you will not advocate removing a man from the Hall who committed a crime of covering up a conspiracy to throw World Series games, but yet then advocate keeping a player who used steroids out of the Hall, then I have to seriously question your standards on how severe each crime really is. I absolutely do not want to do that, but I have to. You stated that you would not support throwing anybody out of the Hall, including Charles Comiskey, but will support not voting Barry Bonds in. I just don't understand that viewpoint. The Hall of Fame is about historical perspective. It is not about what the pressing issue of today is, nor is it about what the pressing issue of yesterday is. It is about what the pressing issue of the crime committed fits historically. Participating in fixing games, conspiring to cover up fixed game scandals, betting on baseball, etc. are all much more severe crimes than using steroids. I know you have stated this already, but what I'm trying to stress is it does not matter if the fixing of the game occurred 80 years ago and steroid use occurred today. Fixing a game 80 years ago is exponentially worse than using steroids today. Likewise, it does not matter if steroid use occurred in 1965 and also occurred today. They are equally as bad. In 100 years, people will be looking at each case in historical perspective and will see that conspiring to cover up fixed games far outweighs using steroids. They may even know 100 times the amount of information regarding steroids since their inception and their use in baseball. I don't know that information, nobody does, but I wish we all did. Charles Comiskey? He should absolutely be thrown out of the Hall of Fame. I'm on record as stating that already earlier in this thread. RedsBaron is also on record as saying that. Why you're not onboard confuses me. Think about it, why am I arguing with you over this and not RedsBaron? It's because he's already stated Comiskey should be out. I asked him, and he answered: Comiskey = out. RedsBaron knows what Comiskey did wrong, and he's in support of tossing the old man out. He also believes Bonds should not belong. Do I disagree with him on Bonds? Sure, but he also believes that Charles Comiskey has no more of a place in the Hall than Bonds. There's absolutely nothing hypocritical about that. It's a fundamental difference of opinion, and we leave it at that. Listen, Reg, you seem to be taking this personal, but I really hope you're not (I'm not taking it personal), and I'm not singling you out on this issue. Heck, honestly I probably agree with you on just about every Reds-related topic you can think of and you're always making outstanding posts. You and I both know certain unnamed infielders have no place in the starting lineup, and we both know Eric Milton isn't the answer to needing a staff ace. But it is crucial to understand the importance of where each possible baseball crime fits in compared to one another. That said, it's also just as crucial to understand the history of all those other crimes and how they had a dire effect on the game. The state of the game in 1921 after the uncovering of the Black Sox Scandal and the state of game right now after the uncovering of Steroidsgate are worlds apart. Most fans simply do not understand that. It is not their fault, but without an understanding of the state of the game in regards to gambling, they likely will not develop an understanding of where to properly place steroid abuse. I don't know how much you've read about the Black Sox Scandal, gambling within the game and how it all nearly tore the game to pieces. If you're not all that familiar with it, I would wholeheartedly encourage you to dig into it at your own pace. Again, I know you've stated that gambling is worse than steroids, but if you knew how much worse gambling was, then I don't think we'd be going back and forth like this. Baseball was entirely crooked and had an integrity level far lower than most fans can imagine today. When woy makes a comment that more people would rather watch Barry Bonds than Hal Chase, he's absolutely correct. What Hal Chase did does not at all excuse what Barry Bonds has done. However, what Barry Bonds has done comes nowhere close to what Hal Chase did. Here's the so-called hierarchy according to baseball that I've referenced: Code:
Participating in the fixing of a World Series game Being complicit in the fixing of a World Series game Actively participating in the fixing of a regular season game Placing bets on one's own team in baseball Placing bets on any game within baseball in which you have no control Steroids Doctored pitches Corked bats etc. Quote:
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Barry Larkin - HOF, 2012 Put an end to the Lost Decade. |
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#216 | |
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Playoffs
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Cincinnati, OH
Posts: 6,233
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Re: Bonds bombshell: Book details slugger's steroid use
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about the DH ![]() In all seriousness, move steroids down a bit, and you've mirrored baseball's viewpoint.
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Barry Larkin - HOF, 2012 Put an end to the Lost Decade. |
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#217 |
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Please come again
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: portland, oregon
Posts: 14,716
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Re: Bonds bombshell: Book details slugger's steroid use
Nice work Yahtzee. I like visual aids. Maybe you could make a Powerpoint Presentation for the gathering.
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Get your nunchucks and the keys to your dad's car. I know where we can get a gun |
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#218 | |
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Pre-tty, pre-tty good!!
Join Date: Oct 2001
Posts: 12,171
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Re: Bonds bombshell: Book details slugger's steroid use
Cyclone, I don't understand how you can object so adamantly to those who disagree with you here when you yourself have admitted that there are different levels of cheating and that they shouldn't all be punished the same.
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And to reg's point, I'm not clear at all on what it is you're looking for here as far as a concession? Is this argument strictly about the HOF for you?
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Grape works as a soda. Sort of as a gum. I wonder why it doesn't work as a pie. Grape pie? There's no grape pie. - Larry David |
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#219 | |
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Member
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Brooklyn
Posts: 767
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Re: Bonds bombshell: Book details slugger's steroid use
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Could they have acted faster? Absolutely. But considering the legal and financial implications for both the league and the players, I'm actually impressed anything close to the current plan was ever implemented. And on a somewhat different note, all these conspiracy theories suggesting the league turned a blind eye to steroids for financial gain seem cut of the same cloth as the theory the CIA sponsored crack gangs in LA to help fund the Contras. |
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#220 |
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Maple SERP
Join Date: Jun 2000
Location: Cincinnati, Ohio
Posts: 17,485
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Re: Bonds bombshell: Book details slugger's steroid use
Interesting statistic:
http://www.baseballprospectus.com/ar...articleid=2795 Aaron produced plenty of late-career homer heroics after 1968. From ages 35 (1969) through 39, he smacked 203 dingers, and he added another 42 in his 40s, meaning that nearly a third of his homers (32.4 percent) came after age 35. The only batters other than Aaron to top 200 homers after 35 are Bonds and Rafael Palmeiro.
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This is the Cal Ripkin Jr. of typos. If you ask me to join your fantasy baseball league and I select Legolas in the first round, don't be angry at me. It's not my fault I've read up on the players and you haven't. |
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#221 | |
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Playoffs
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Cincinnati, OH
Posts: 6,233
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Re: Bonds bombshell: Book details slugger's steroid use
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Ultimately, I think what everyone should attempt to do is get down to the basic aspects of why steroids are bad for baseball. Maybe you'll agree, maybe you won't, but I believe it can be ironed down to four basic points: 1) Steroids are unhealthy 2) Steroids are illegal within the United States 3) Steroids are banned in other sports 4) Steroids give the user an unnatural edge IMO, all things eventually point to number one. Steroids are illegal within the United States predominantly because they are unhealthy. I think you'll agree on that. Steroids are banned in other sports because they are unhealthy and illegal in certain parts of the world. Again, I think you'll agree on that. I don't think there's anything controversial with any of those statements. Number four is where we may differ because we have to ask ourselves what exactly constitutes an "unnatural" edge. A hitter can have offseason lasik eye surgery to improve his eyesight, thereby giving him serious potential to increase his productivity at the plate. IMO, that is also an unnatural edge that is gained (and also unavailable to players in earlier generations). Of course, I've never read all that much on lasik eye surgery being terribly unhealthy. I've never heard of it being illegal within the United States. I've also never seen it banned in other sports. So we're still stuck asking ourselves what then constitutes an unnatural edge? Is it using modern medicine in a healthy fashion? Is it using everything that is banned? Well if it's banned, then it's likely banned because it's unhealthy. And if you're using something in a healthy fashion, well then it isn't unhealthy. When you think about it, is there anything banned that is absolutely healthy? If people hang onto the unnatural edge factor as the prime reason why steroids are banned, then I must ask what is the difference between an unnatural steroid and an unnatural, healthy modern medical method. It always seems to come back to the same point that unnatural steroids are illegal, banned in other sports, etc ... which all comes full circle back to the health factor. I think when people take a step back and truly analyze why certain substances are legal and others aren't, the key ingredient is a health factor. Anything deemed unhealthy is banned while everything deemed healthy is acceptable to use. When athletes resort to the unhealthy, banned substances, they are accused of cheating. When athletes resort to the healthy, good-for-ya substances, they are looked up to as hard working role models.
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Barry Larkin - HOF, 2012 Put an end to the Lost Decade. |
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#222 |
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Maple SERP
Join Date: Jun 2000
Location: Cincinnati, Ohio
Posts: 17,485
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Re: Bonds bombshell: Book details slugger's steroid use
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/articl...eed=rss.giants
Phoenix -- Baseball Commissioner Bud Selig said he'll review material in a new book that describes in detail Barry Bonds' use of steroids beginning after the 1998 season. "I will review all the material that's relative in every way," Selig said Wednesday at Chase Field before Team USA lost 8-6 to Canada in the World Baseball Classic. "Obviously, we've only seen parts of things. The book itself doesn't come out until the end of the month, but we'll review everything that there is to look at." Asked to elaborate, Selig said, "I was very careful to say exactly what I said, and that's exactly what I mean." The book, "Game of Shadows: Barry Bonds, BALCO, and the Steroids Scandal that Rocked Professional Sports," written by The Chronicle's Mark Fainaru-Wada and Lance Williams, will be released March 27. Selig said four assistants will carry out the review: Bob DuPuy, Major League Baseball's president and chief operations officer; John McHale, executive vice president of administration; Rob Manfred, executive vice president of labor relations and human resources; and Jimmy Lee Solomon, executive vice president of baseball operations. Selig did not rule out a meeting with Bonds, although he said nothing is pending. "Given everything that's come out, I can't sit here and tell you today, 'Well, that's fine,' " Selig said. He made it clear his review won't be a Pete Rose-type investigation even though Rose, like Bonds, has made repeated denials of allegations against him. Reminded that baseball had initiated the Rose investigation leading to his lifetime ban for gambling on baseball, Selig said, "I don't want to get back into the Pete Rose thing, but there was enormous evidence that (former commissioners) Peter Ueberroth and Bart Giamatti had right from the beginning. That's what prompted them to do what they did." Bonds is approaching the 2006 season with 708 career home runs, third behind Hank Aaron (755) and Babe Ruth (714). Selig suggested that the records for Bonds and other players linked to steroids should stand. "We have no empirical data before 2003," said Selig, citing the absence of drug policies before then. "I've heard a lot of people make observations. I think I've even used the term 'McCarthyism' in some great regard about people who, without much evidence other than what they believe is anecdotal evidence, say, 'Well, this person did it, or that person did it.' "I'm going to be very sensitive about all that because, after all, you're playing with people's lives and their reputations." The Giants, mostly silent since Sports Illustrated released excerpts of the book on Tuesday, said in a statement that they'll cooperate with Selig: "The Giants fully support and will assist with Commissioner Bud Selig's review of the circumstances surrounding the recent published report about Barry Bonds." Bonds left the Giants' training camp in Scottsdale, Ariz., for a child-custody hearing in Redwood City. On his way into the San Mateo County Hall of Justice, he did not respond when asked if he'll acknowledge or apologize for his steroids use. On his way out, he did not reply to a question about Selig's plan to review his situation in the light of the information in the book. When a radio reporter told Bonds the station was receiving calls of support for him, Bonds said, "I love 'em." He had no further comment. Bonds' ex-wife, Sun, also had no comment. Back in Phoenix, players and former players weighed in about whether Bonds, like Rose, deserved to be barred from the Hall of Fame. Hall of Famer Mike Schmidt, in Phoenix to broadcast the WBC, said Bonds still deserves to be admitted. "He's a fellow baseball player, and I've been to some degree in his world, too," Schmidt said. "I'll do anything I can to give him the benefit of the doubt. I never personally saw any of it happen. I don't have factual evidence. I don't have any admittance of guilt by him. All I know is what you know -- it's all denial. Visually, we might question a little bit. But who are we to say he didn't get that strong, that big from rigorous workouts?" Schmidt is releasing his own book, "Clearing the Bases," on March 14. He said he discusses, among other things, how performance-enhancing drugs have changed the game the past 15 years, in particular the "ridiculous offensive explosion." Another former slugger, Larry Walker, Team Canada's batting coach, agreed that Bonds is a Hall of Famer. "It's very unfair for Barry when there are other guys who could be talked about and ripped -- because I see it, and you guys (the media) see it," Walker said. "I'm not naming names, but you'd have to be blind, you know?" Former Giant Joe Nathan, a reliever on Team USA and an ex-Bonds teammate, said he hopes the steroids scandal doesn't push Bonds into premature retirement. "I hope he doesn't. I hope he can stay mentally strong," Nathan said. "I feel he deserves a chance at breaking the record. No matter what comes out of this, he still is one of the best players I got a chance to see or play against. It's a shame this has taken all the headlines when (the WBC) is going on." Astros pitcher Roger Clemens called the latest report a "witch hunt" and said, "I know Barry, and I consider him to be a friend. I worry about the man's health more than I do about him hitting home runs or whatever the point of this witch hunt we're on is about."
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This is the Cal Ripkin Jr. of typos. If you ask me to join your fantasy baseball league and I select Legolas in the first round, don't be angry at me. It's not my fault I've read up on the players and you haven't. |
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#223 | |
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Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Southern KY
Posts: 6,967
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Re: Bonds bombshell: Book details slugger's steroid use
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It is kind of humerous that everyone is believing his ex-girlfriend.
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"My mission is to be the ray of hope, the guy who stands out there on that beautiful field and owns up to his mistakes and lets people know it's never completely hopeless, no matter how bad it seems at the time. I have a platform and a message, and now I go to bed at night, sober and happy, praying I can be a good messenger." -Josh Hamilton |
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#224 | |
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Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Southern KY
Posts: 6,967
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Re: Bonds bombshell: Book details slugger's steroid use
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I'll be watching.
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"My mission is to be the ray of hope, the guy who stands out there on that beautiful field and owns up to his mistakes and lets people know it's never completely hopeless, no matter how bad it seems at the time. I have a platform and a message, and now I go to bed at night, sober and happy, praying I can be a good messenger." -Josh Hamilton |
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#225 |
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Member
Join Date: Jun 2004
Posts: 34,655
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Re: Bonds bombshell: Book details slugger's steroid use
I'm liking David Wells more and more each day...
Boomer: Bonds shouldn't pass the BabeAssociated Press FORT MYERS, Fla. -- David Wells gave up Barry Bonds' 701st home run. He doesn't want the Giants slugger to pass Babe Ruth's total of 714. "No. Not really," the Boston Red Sox left-hander said Wednesday, one day after excerpts of a book were released alleging that Bonds used steroids and other performance-enhancing drugs. Bonds needs seven homers to pass Ruth for second place and 48 to overtake Hank Aaron for the top spot. Wells praised Bonds' baseball skills but said he should "be a man and come out and say that he did it" if he used steroids. "If you're guilty and you got caught, come clean. I think you can get a lot more respect from people than [by] lying," Wells said. In Tampa, Joe Torre said allegations of steroid use have given baseball "a black eye." "I think the one thing that baseball has always tried to maintain was the integrity because our game more than any other game statistics are so important," the New York Yankees manager said. "I think that right now that is called into question, and it's a shame in Barry's case. He's such a good player ... long, long ago before there was any doubt on what made him good." Torre is concerned about the long-term impact on fans. "It's certainly a black eye that we all have to be aware of," he said. "It can turn to anger if you try to circumvent and get around trying to help us clean up. Trying to cut corners or trying a different way to keep doing what you're doing, that I think is wrong and knowingly wrong." Wells said that Bonds "probably" used steroids but that he also had been sure Rafael Palmeiro, his former teammate in Baltimore, didn't. Palmeiro was suspended during the second half of last season after a positive steroids test. "I would have bet my house that Rafael Palmeiro never did them," Wells said. "He's not a large, cut man. He's not. And then it happened. I mean, I had his back the whole time and then he got nailed for it." The upcoming book "Game of Shadows," written by two San Francisco Chronicle reporters, alleged that Bonds used performance-enhancing drugs for at least five seasons beginning in 1998. Such drugs were banned by baseball after the 2002 season. Wells seemed uncertain whether Bonds should make the Hall of Fame if his alleged use of steroids is proven. "If it comes out and he has done them, then no," Wells said in the Red Sox clubhouse. A few minutes later, he said, "Barry a Hall of Famer in my book? Yeah. Is Raffy? Yeah. ... If we [players] are going to vote, we'd probably vote yeah. Players? Yeah. Pitchers probably wouldn't." He said Bonds' added muscle and increased head size cast suspicion on the San Francisco outfielder. Wells said he heard a comic on a radio show Wednesday morning joke about Bonds' hat size. "He goes, 'They use his helmet as a Jacuzzi.' I about died when I heard that," Wells said, "You just don't like to accuse somebody of doing it, but you look at him and you can't help but think. I mean, he's getting bigger and bigger." Wells, who was with San Diego when he gave up Bonds' 701st homer on Sept. 18, 2004, wondered how other sluggers would have done if they used steroids. "If Hank Aaron was on them it probably would have been 1,000 homers" instead of his total of 755, Wells said. "It's a shame that it's come down to this and it's really putting a hurting on the game." He also criticized commissioner Bud Selig for not dealing with the problem aggressively. "He's putting it on Congress. He's putting it on" the players' association and passing the buck, Wells said. "He's doing what he does best." Torre said Bonds' Hall of Fame status is up to the individual voter. He does feel the home run marks has been watered down. "I think right now we have already diluted that," Torre said. "They broke 60 every year. The only good part that came out of this, besides the fans were entertained, all of sudden somebody thought highly of Roger Maris." http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/news/story?id=2360259 |
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