Three more years left on the Ballot for Bonds.
he's one of the greatest of all time, you can't start drawing lines in the sand on it when all of the historical greats in the hall are linked to performance enhancers in one way or another. he needs to be in the HOF.Good news for Barrysteroid, no thank you.
he's one of the greatest of all time, you can't start drawing lines in the sand on it when all of the historical greats in the hall are linked to performance enhancers in one way or another. he needs to be in the HOF.
"...all of the historical greats in the hall are linked to performance enhancers in one way or another..."?
Yeah, Babe Ruth came to the ballpark after drinking booze all night. And the group of Billy Martin, Whitey Ford and Mickey Mantle were into drinking heavily. Getting looped = performance enhancers?
Please reference where you got the information that all historical greats are linked to (whatever that means) performance enhancers. Let's take Willie Mays and Randy Johnson, for example. Or do you consider taking an aspirin for a headache to be a performance enhancer? Any medication for pain relief is a reaction to a condition, not an enhancer.
Now if you said that league and team executives were aware of enhancers by some and did nothing about it, that would be true. But it doesn't absolve the players who would have had lesser lifetime stats (upon which HOF selection is generally based). It is a disservice to those players throughout history who did not dope up. It is not just about Barry Bonds. Or the other cheaters.
Ask yourself this. If a player is caught cheating at a poker or golf match, would he be rewarded (let alone honored) for it? If you were their opponent, would you honor them?
"...all of the historical greats in the hall are linked to performance enhancers in one way or another..."?
Yeah, Babe Ruth came to the ballpark after drinking booze all night. And the group of Billy Martin, Whitey Ford and Mickey Mantle were into drinking heavily. Getting looped = performance enhancers?
Please reference where you got the information that all historical greats are linked to (whatever that means) performance enhancers. Let's take Willie Mays and Randy Johnson, for example. Or do you consider taking an aspirin for a headache to be a performance enhancer? Any medication for pain relief is a reaction to a condition, not an enhancer.
Now if you said that league and team executives were aware of enhancers by some and did nothing about it, that would be true. But it doesn't absolve the players who would have had lesser lifetime stats (upon which HOF selection is generally based). It is a disservice to those players throughout history who did not dope up. It is not just about Barry Bonds. Or the other cheaters.
Ask yourself this. If a player is caught cheating at a poker or golf match, would he be rewarded (let alone honored) for it? If you were their opponent, would you honor them?
Barry bonds hated the media and the media hated him (never actually failed a drug test). David Ortiz was a darling to the media and they loved him, he also failed a drug test in 2003, so let’s see what happens when Ortiz debuts on the ballotBenzos have a new name from the days of Mike Schmidt and Jim Bunning. They're called "energy drinks." Sugar, sugar, toss in a lot of caffeine, and then some high fructose corn syrup. Maybe the concern about MLB retirees should be type 2 diabetes.
Anyway, if you leave out all the cheaters and scumbags from the baseball HOF, then kick out:
John Mc Graw
Ty Cobb
Enos Slaughter
Gaylord Perry
..the list goes on. I get the sense Barroid just doesn't care any longer. Contrast that to Pete Rose, I still think it will take a vote of the Veteran's Committee, and that might require the passing of a generation of folks at that table.
'Looks like you're right. Thanks for the details. OK, I'll accept the dopers going into the HOF.Former baseball player Jim Bouton (Appendix A)
detailed the usage of greenies for a multitude of causes or symptoms. Whether it be a hangover from a night of partying, general fatigue or a player in need of a boost of home run swatting energy-- greenies were the friends of ballplayers everywhere (Emen, 2007).
“In 1964, aided by uppers, (Bouton) led the American League in starts (Chafets, 2009, pg. 178).” Bouton recalls in his book, Ball Four, that once, a player “received a supply of five hundred amphetamine pills (Chafets, 2009, pg. 178).” He admitted that “just about the whole Baltimore (Orioles) team takes them. Most of the (Detroit) Tigers. Most of the guys on (his team) (Chafets, 2009, pg. 178),” too.
Amphetamines (like steroids) were illegal without prescription in American society but were just a part of the baseball culture. Best I can tell, amphetamines are performance enhancing drugs that, many people feel, sharpen focus and increase energy levels and help an athlete overcome exhaustion (Posnanski, 2010).
The great Willie Mays admitted,
I would go to the doctor and would say to the doctor, ‘Hey, I need something to keep me going. Could you give me some sort of vitamin?’ I don’t know what they put in there, and I never asked a question about anything (Posnanski, 2010).
Just about every player used amphetamines. “Pete Rose did. Hank Aaron admitted trying it (Posnanski, 2010).”
While amphetamines were not banned from baseball until 1971 (Chafets, 2009, pg. 178), former Royals outfielder Brian McRae (Appendix A) recalled how amphetamines have become a part of the clubhouse scene. “There were always two pots of coffee brewing in the clubhouse -- one conventional and the other laced with stimulants (Crasnick, 2006).”
https://sites.google.com/site/brettbushthesis/chapter-4/amphetamine-steroid-era/amphetamines
I mean t Jim Bouton, not Jim Bunning...sorry about that.Barry bonds hated the media and the media hated him (never actually failed a drug test). David Ortiz was a darling to the media and they loved him, he also failed a drug test in 2003, so let’s see what happens when Ortiz debuts on the ballot
https://www.usatoday.com/story/spor...jeff-bagwell-tim-raines-steroid-era/96742034/Yet suspicions of Rodriguez’s PED use (“Only God knows,’’ Rodriguez has said to the allegations), were largely ignored by the voters. Rodriguez, only the eighth Latin American player to reach the Hall of Fame, barely was elected with 76% of the ballots — receiving only four more votes than required — but still joined his hero, Bench, as the only catcher to be elected on the first ballot.