When Liquid Plumr failed to clear things up, the city filed suit.
Read More...The lawsuit argues MLB’s decree that the San Francisco Giants have exclusive territorial rights to San Jose, which the defending World Series champions refuse to relinquish, constitutes unlawful restraint of trade.
“For years, MLB has unlawfully conspired to control the location and relocation of major league men’s professional baseball clubs under the guise of an ‘antitrust exemption’ applied to the business of baseball,” said ...
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< 1 2 3 >Matt Lawton
Why are all excuses deemed BS? Have we reached the stage of testing where false positives don't happen?
Melky's suspension probably explains why the Giants were trying to trade for Alfonso before the deadline.
Give me one example where a player had an explanation and it wasn't shruggeddededed off as BS.
Wait, what? How can your average be negative and your total be positive?
That's not a negative sign.
But again, that's not what shoe was saying. He simply asked if this was the first time anyone had gotten nailed and didn't offer an explanation/excuse. He didn't say each and every explanation/excuse was BS.
You're right. I misread it.
Mini-stroke.
Yesterday I was at a bar and a guy was talking to a crowd of people and he emitted dolphin sounds while trying to talk.
They're shrugged off because the vast majority are BS, unless if you believe that multi-millionaire baseball players whose multi-millions depend on their ability to continue playing baseball and who are drug tested up the whazoo and know they are going to be pilloried personally up the same whazoo if they test positive do indeed just randomly take pills and supplements their friend or doctor or the guy in the gym gives them without bothering to check what's inside, which seems to be the most popular excuse by leaps and bounds. Or to take the lesser-used excuse of false positives that baseball specifically has a far greater incidence of false positives than other sports where false positives seem to be extremely rare, even though all the sports are pretty much taking the same tests for the same things (cycling a special case because of blood boosters, though it seems we have had exactly zero false positives in that sport, everyone who's tested positive has admitted it eventually, so that doesn't really help the argument). False positives in most systems are extremely rare, and significantly more so than the much more common false negative, for the simple truth that it's easier to miss something that is there rather than find something that isn't.
Either way any of those beliefs are entirely different unfounded beliefs than the unfounded belief of assuming that the great majority of these excuses are BS. But they're unfounded belief nonetheless, and in the end very likely far less accurate for all the obvious reasons.
Maybe steroids should be legal in baseball after all. But it seems to me the pro-steroids (not a perfect term) side often goes too far - not only should steroids be legal, but they don't actually help at all, and when somebody is caught we don't believe they did them anyway. The lady doth protest too much.
Would the Cubs take Hunter Pence for Alfonso Soriano?
And while he's 48 and hasn't played MLB since the Bush administration, all he has to do is be better than Aubrey Huff. Even money that Willie Mays could outplay Huff.
Well, this admission should open to the door to the Hall of Fame for him.
Hard to nail down exactly what it is though - it could be synthetic testosterone, or it could be increased levels of his own testosterone brought about by injecting another substance (e.g., HCG).
He is owning up to it, but the stuff these guys like to say about "making a mistake" is of course bullshite rationalization.
Missing your exit ramp on the highway is a mistake. Leaving the house with two different colored socks on is a mistake. Taking steroids and other illegal substances is something these guys are knowingly and intentionally doing in order to try to game the system and get an unfair advantage. They're not "making a mistake", they're proactively cheating, they know exactly what they're doing, and they know full well they shouldn't be doing it.
It doesn't even matter if he means because he got caught or because he feels he did something wrong in retrospect - the decision was STILL a mistake.
Yes, but say he tested positive for elevated levels of testosterone.
I understand exactly why people say this. "I made a mistake" is the classic standard New Age way that people rationalize getting caught doing something they knew they shouldn't have been doing. It sounds good, and it's a hell of a lot easier to publicly say than things like "I don't give a f*ck about the rules, I'm a liar, I'm a cheater, I'll do anything I want in order to get ahead in life", that sort of thing.
I go by thickness.
Fair enough.
That's what she said.
I can kind of see Joey's point (God help me), but I think the definition of "mistake" technically covers a decision that in hindsight one believes was wrong. So, Lassus wins.
It reminds me of this scene from The Last Boy Scout, with Bruce Willis playing the role of Joe and Bruce McGill as Mike:
Well, there are some indications that anabolic steroids can improve vision a bit. Also, increased bat speed can allow a batter to wait a little longer before swinging, which can help him avoid being fooled on breaking pitches out of the strike zone.
The increased bat speed won't just automagically come as a result of increased testosterone. Increased bat speed is very much a specific (type of) strength, and needs to be specifically trained for. The ability to develope the highest maximal force in the most beneficial condition and the ability to develope maximal force in a specific condition are different abilities. The lighter the external resistance (ie swinging a baseball bat) and the less the time you have, the greater the difference between the ability to develope the highest maximal force in the most beneficial condition and the ability to develope maximal force in that specific condition.
Why? Sanchez was suspended over a months ago for shittiness.
Huh? Why not? Sanchez = -1.2 WAR for the Royals, Cabrera = 4.7 WAR for the Giants. Obv WAR is not the end all but that is a huge gap. It's not like the Giants lose the wins Cabrera helped them with.
edit: half liter of cola to RoyalsRetro
The gap is already quite large enough to call that a complete win for the Giants.
Yes, because drunk bleacher fans who heckle tend to be the introspective type.
interestingly braun stated the worst razzing was san fran
for what it is worth
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