Dumb Dora/Donald doesn’t pretend to be enough of an ____________ .
Read More...If an already-signed player who hits an average of 20 home runs and 80 RBIs per year makes, say, $5 million per season, then surely a second player who is averaging 24 home runs and 86 RBIs deserves $6 million per year. It made perfect sense in those honest days, before the introduction of steroids and performance-enhancing drugs to the game.
But teams made deals based on the supposed integrity of the accumulated statistics ...
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1. Robert in Manhattan Beach posted on January 10, 2013 at 03:11 PM # hit 0 | hit 0This is really big, welcome news.
There's at least one possible Hall-of-Famer who was suspended for PED use a decade ago. I wonder if anyone even notices when he hits the ballot.
Who is this? Shawn Merriman?
The other night, Fergie Jenkins (I think) added credence to the rumor that there's an HOF-inducted juicer who played in the 80's and 90's. I think Robothal or Olney reported something similar a few years back, too.
Doubt it; isn't is just assumed that the vast majority of football players are juicing, one way or another?
Presumably steroids make them able to hit each other harder and more often.
In baseball, some cheaters break some records, and there's not enough ink to write about it.
In football, some cheaters contribute to brain damage and death, and there's not a word said about it.
It seems like offensive records in the NFL are being broken every year.
I really, really hope someone who is in the HOF will just admit to using steroids and get the whole 'we must not let them in' thing over with. We'd have one or two more years of it but at least we'd see an end in sight. Instead we can expect moralizing for the next decade I suspect.
He did no such thing. He merely repeated the rumor.
Jenkins gave credence in the sense that he explained that it's been a topic of discussion amongst Hall of Famers (again, one 80s+90s player in particular), and he did not exactly go out of his way to dispel it.
In football, some cheaters contribute to brain damage and death, and there's not a word said about it.
No one cares about football players beyond how they played last Sunday.
OTOH, the single-season and career HR records are sacrosanct.
I think it would be very interesting to have some sort of sportswriter roundtable about PEDs that features HOF voters from both sports.
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