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Baseball Primer Newsblog— The Best News Links from the Baseball Newsstand
Thursday, October 29, 2009
Straight out of the Sloan/Barri/Bonds songbook, I assume.
Given what we know now, it’s pretty clear that McGwire took the fall for steroid use that was both widespread and well known inside the game—and hardly a secret to even casual observers of the game. Let’s face it, everyone was having too much fun and making too much money to complain. But when it came time to assign blame, only Barry Bonds and Roger Clemens have lost more than McGwire. And given the consensus reaction of the media to Tuesday’s announcement—silence will not be tolerated, an apology is mandatory—McGwire is still paying the price for taking the Fifth.
But given the events of the last few years—the government’s illegal seizure of baseball’s 2003 drug tests and the subsequent leaks, the use of the Mitchell Report to corner Roger Clemens on evidence that was both questionable and outside the statute of limitations—it’s hard to see what else McGwire could have done. McGwire had to know that his refusal to answer the steroid question would be considered an admission of guilt, which begs the question: why didn’t he just cop to it and move on? The answer: because federal agent Jeff Novitzky and the Balco prosecutors would have scooped him up, put him in front of a grand jury, and asked what else he knew.
And then it would really have gotten ugly.
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1. Foghorn Leghorn Posted: October 29, 2009 at 01:13 PM (#3369974)Participants in a few conflicts around the world might dispute this.
So many possibilities, so little time
Except these crazy eyes.
You're not serious.
I am serious. I can see the argument that Barry Bonds "took the fall" for steroid use. I can't see it for McGwire. McGwire was already retired when all this stuff came out - how did he take the fall?
I could understand if steroid use was cheating while he played, but it wasn't, so yea he's paid a very high price for just playing the game like everyone else.
"Hopefully" & "literally" say hello!
In that case, somebody'd better tell the New York Times ("The only way to punish them is to deny them a place in Cooperstown. The punishment has already been visited on Mark McGwire" , “I felt he had been punished long enough.”), ESPN ("MLB should use Cooperstown as leverage in punishing PED users... Perhaps the Hall of Fame voters will punish you when it is time for induction"), NBC Sports ("A piece of his punishment likely will be handed down this winter"), Major League Baseball ("in McGwire's specific case, some voters had expressed a desire to give him a one-year "punishment" for his alleged steroid use."), and the various HoF voters who have explicitly written about "the only way to punish" steroid users.
That you don't care what sportswriters think is great but I am willing to bet that Mark McGwire would dearly love to be in the Hall of Fame and honored with the best of the best as he deserves. That there may be valid reasons for him not to be inducted the reality is that he was surely going in had it not been for his appearance in front of Congress.
I am willing to bet that Mark McGwire would dearly love to be in the Hall of Fame and honored with the best of the best as he deserves.
None of us know McGwire's heart. But he never seemed comfortable with the wall of praise, either.
I've gotten the sense that Mark McGwire's unbroken silence in response to the sportswriters' last 7 or 8 years of angry revisionism, suggested apology statements, and 22% vote totals has galled them.
Not almost every baseball player deserves to be in the Hall of Fame. McGwire would be an easy in if not for the steroids mess. That's how he's being punished--he's being deprived of something he would have received. If you want to argue that McGwire wouldn't be in even without the steroids issue, then I'll agree to disagree with you.
What do these two things have to do with one another? If he were "really" punished to your satisfaction, would you then feel sorry for him? I don't feel sorry for Timothy McVeigh, but I'd say he was punished.
i hope the sports 'writers' choke on it myself. i'm sick of their phony moral outrage.
i'm a big cardinal fan, so naturally i hope mcgwire's coaching turns the whole lineup into babe ruths. the fact that it would bug the hell out of those pipsqueaks would be the icing on the cake.
Floyd Landis was punished for PED's by not being named Tour De France winner. Same thing. Or do you think that Landis wasn't punished, or that his punishment was limited to not being able to participate in future events?
I guess originally I didn't consider inclusion or exclusion in the Baseball Hall of Fame to be a comment on anything, because I really don't care who is included in or excluded from the Hall of Fame.
As for things that actually matter in the real world -
- He was never suspended or fined for PED use.
- He was never the subject of criminal investigation or prosecution for PED use.
- When, during McGwire's career, a reporter pointed out evidence of PED use, it was the reporter, not McGwire, who was attacked in the press.
- MLB made no effort to prevent him from being hired as a coach.
From that angle, surely you can see why I was confused as to how McGwire "took the fall"?
But I see now that this conversation is purely about McGwire and the Hall, which is a subject I couldn't care less about, so I'll back out.
Floyd Landis won the Tour de France in 2006. A later drug test demonstrated the presence of a skewed testosterone/epitestosterone ratio during Stage 17. He was then stripped of the title and suspended for over 2 years.
edit: The situations aren't exactly analogous: Landis was stripped of an honor he had otherwise objectively earned due to PED allegations, whereas McGwire has been prevented from receiving an honor he otherwise subjectively earned due to drug allegations. But it's close enough.
A Tour de France win is more analogous to winning a championship in baseball than it is to getting into the Hall of Fame, no?
Yes, in the sense that it's the ultimate goal of the athlete to win a title.
No, in the sense that both a Tour de France victory and induction into the Hall of Fame are the most prestigious individual achievements the athlete can accomplish.
I'd lean more toward the "no" way of looking at it since PED use is an individual matter.
And not only that, but he could still be elected to the Hall of Fame. This isn't a Pete Rose/Shoeless Joe Jackson situation.
Oh, I'll agree with poor choice of words w/r/t "take the fall." The thing I disagree with most here is this:
"He was never fined or suspended or received any punishment whatsoever."
I think his denial (so far) of the HOF qualifies as a punishment, however roundabout.
EDIT: Agree with #27 in that if he is elected at some point, he will have not been punished in any real way.
Twisting the knife in his back, I thought.
It was a supplement, and McGwire was widely criticized for taking it, much more than the now nameless reporter. I guess you don't think having to endure years of public criticism over something he was allowed to do, in fact was part of his job, is any type of punishment. I'd love to see what would happen if a coworker got angry that you worked too hard and made him look bad, and decided to publicly criticize you every day. That's not punishment is it. Just plain harrasment right? But not punishment?
Somebody should email Dewey and let him know that someone else used his ID for posts 24 & 27.
DB
Not almost every baseball player deserves to be in the Hall of Fame. McGwire would be an easy in if not for the steroids mess. That's how he's being punished--he's being deprived of something he would have received. If you want to argue that McGwire wouldn't be in even without the steroids issue, then I'll agree to disagree with you.
Of course McGwire would have sailed into the HoF on the first ballot without that deaf and dumb act he pulled at the hearing. Big Duh. But what does that have to do with Selig?
Does Selig elect players to the Hall of Fame?
Has Selig been telling writers to blackball McGwire? I've seen no evidence of that.
Did Selig tell LaRussa he couldn't hire McGwire as a coach?
Has Selig ever done one thing to impair McGwire's earning ability?
Unless you think that it was somehow Selig's personal obligation to send a video statement to every Hall of Fame voter, endorsing McGwire's character and telling them that a vote for McGwire would be his fervent wish, then it's hard to see where Selig is responsible for McGwire's "plight."
It wasn't Selig who clammed up before Congress. It was McGwire.
And it isn't Selig who's keeping McGwire out of the Hall of Fame.
If you've got a problem with poor McGwire's being blackballed by the writers (Boo, hoo), then take it up with the writers. Selig has nothing to do with his exclusion. McGwire brought on this "punishment" 100% on his own.
It was the AP's Steve Wilstein, and at the time, he received far more criticism than McGwire did.
I guess originally I didn't consider inclusion or exclusion in the Baseball Hall of Fame to be a comment on anything, because I really don't care who is included in or excluded from the Hall of Fame.
As for things that actually matter in the real world -
Being elected to the HOF brings a place in history and a source of income (appearance fees and the like). It most definitely matters in the real world.
I was responding to Dewey, not to the article.
This is not right.
Forget punishment. Who has been accountable? Bonds, Mc, Raffy, Clemens--they've been called to account in the court of journalistic wrath and of public opinion. Selig and fiends have looked the other way and counted their money and have persistently and proactively eluded accountability.
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