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Baseball Primer Newsblog— The Best News Links from the Baseball Newsstand
Saturday, January 19, 2008
“But in this nation, the world’s greatest democracy, there is nothing they can do to prevent me from being punished for a crime they know I did not commit. Some who have called have said that I am a modern-day Job.”... R. Budd Selig then returns to the podium and pulls out a .357 Magnum revolver.
Some words from the Oakland Tribune jumped off the page: “During Selig’s 15-plus years on the job…MLB has…accepting, if not embracing, rampant use of performance-enhancing steroids.” Now this is one man’s opinion, albeit remarkably uninformed and irresponsible. I say that because I worked for the Giants and closely with Barry Bonds—a player at the heart of BALCO during the early years in question—and I know of no one who accepted or embraced steroids among management, ownership and staff. There were, however, suspicions and an unwillingness to “turn over the rock.”
I believe baseball was victimized by its own culture—one not unlike the military in which loyalty trumps all. There is no room in baseball for a whistle-blower. What the sport desperately needed was a Deep Throat. Oh, by the way, who made Deep Throat? Two reporters Woodward and Bernstein. So when I read a columnist trashing Selig, calling him the “Steroids Commissioner,” I want to ask if that writer ever tried to investigate the use of performance-enhancing drugs in baseball. I was in the game as a broadcaster and did nothing. Did this writer snoop, ask questions, or try to follow in the lead of a Woodward or Bernstein? Or is it just too comfortable to sit back and blast away after the fact?
Repoz
Posted: January 19, 2008 at 11:17 PM | 17 comment(s)
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1. X-Roid User Posted: January 19, 2008 at 11:52 PM (#2672016)Bud should (and will, IMO) be judged on the Wild Card, interleague play, and a few other things. In my opinion, those two have been unmitigated disasters. But I'm not writing the history book, and it's probably too early to really evaluate those things anyway.
Don't even get me started on expansion teams.
And integration? Horrible idea.
scott, I'm prepared for history to prove me really wrong. But at this point, my best judgment is that these were bad ideas. I said it at the time, and I plan on continuing to say it until the day I die.
I'm not against all progress, just dumb progress.
I think a better analogy would be a prison warden under whom the inmates are routinely abused. Sure, he didn't tell them to, nor did he know about specific incidents, but he did turn a blind eye to it.
Selig now seems to want to show that he doesn't like steroids, but in the end he didn't really do much about it. I don't think he deserves lots of blame for it, but he was what we would call an "enabler".
I think that for your example to work well, MLB (unbeknonst to Selig) would be administering illegal steroids to its players.
No no no, I'm very happy Florida has two major league teams playing in empty stadiums with the successful teams of the league forced to subsidize them to the tune of hundreds of millions. The more the merrier, I always say.
Interleague I could do without.
I didn't ##### and moan about expansion in the 1990s, when there were expansion teams.
I don't p & m about expansion in general, but it's hard to think of two less suitable cities for Major League Baseball than Miami and St. Petersburg. Selig would've been better off just putting two more teams in New York and giving those few thousand stalwart Florida fans free lifetime Trailways passes.
If either team had had a better owner that was willing to invest money in the team -- including in a stadium -- there's no reason to think they couldn't have been successful as franchises go. Tampa in particular plays in a horrid stadium and has averaged almost 100 losses per year over their entire existence, with their best season being 70 wins. That they haven't drawn many fans doesn't say that expansion was a mistake. It says that hiring Chuck LaMar was a mistake. (Two words: Kevin Stocker.)
Interesting, I thought safeguarding integrity and credibility was in the job description.
Wait, so Selig shouldn't be held accountable for turning a blind eye to PEDs because no one outside baseball blew the whistle? So this means Watergate (and the culture of the government apparatus serving the personal needs of the president) wasn't Nixon's fault either. It was just good reporting that made everything work out the way it was supposed to.
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