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Baseball Primer Newsblog— The Best News Links from the Baseball Newsstand
Friday, February 29, 2008
I saw my giant head laughing
Rolling on the ground
And now Im set free
Im set free
Andy Pettitte, Roger Clemens, Miguel Tejada and the vast majority of the 89 players mentioned in the Mitchell Report will not be suspended by Major League Baseball for their alleged steroid and HGH transgressions, and it remains possible that none of the 89 players will be banned, SI.com has learned.
Commissioner Bud Selig is not believed to be close to making a final determination on penalties, but MLB officers and the players’ union have been working hard to follow Sen. George Mitchell’s 19 other recommendations, and under those conditions Selig may be less likely than first believed to buck Mitchell’s strongly worded recommendation not to impose penalties.
If there are suspensions, the penalties would follow the steroid policy in place at the time of the infraction, sources said. Since only a handful of the 89 alleged infractions occurred after MLB’s steroid policy included suspensions (penalties for steroids started in 2004 and for HGH in 2005), only those few players—and none among Pettitte, Clemens and Tejada—would be exposed to a possible ban. From a reading of the report and given that more than 50 percent of the players mentioned are already retired, it appears that fewer than 10 players could be affected.
Repoz
Posted: February 29, 2008 at 10:38 PM | 19 comment(s)
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1. flournoy Posted: February 29, 2008 at 10:57 PM (#2703423)I hadn't realized that bans were ever a consideration.
- Player Fails to Comply with Drug Testing Program
- Player Test Positive for a Prohibited Substance
- Conviction for the Possession or Use of Prohibited Substance
- Participation in the Sale or Distribution of Prohibited Substance
The owners have an amazingly poor record at trying to invoke punishments that aren't allowed by the CBA and willful violations have legal consequences. The only exception, I guess, is for players in the 4th category, that may have helped their teammates obtain the drugs, which is a different matter.
The problem with this is that Selig handed a 50-game suspension to Grimsley when he was arrested (but <u>not</u> yet convicted) and, as far as I know, the MLBPA never protested it. The suspension itself was moot because Grimsley was released and will likely never be employed in MLB again, but I was surprised that the MLBPA didn't raise concerns about the precedent that was being set with that move.
I see this posted, but it is not true. The commissioners office has always been able to suspend players under BIOG for drug violations under any CBA, including the present one.
Arbitrators have overturned the lifetime bans or the suspensions that are disproportionate for similar offenses.
It is completely erroneous to say the Commissioner lacks the power (Not that you said it, but some of the zealots have said this before). It is largely untrue that they have had a bad record.
gotta love the media. Toughest testing in professional sports, and they are still not happy. They want bans. Why does anybody even read SI anymore. Just horribly biased journalism. They should just stick to porn. course they suck at that too.
But we're not taking about vague powers, we're taking about disobeying the clearly outlined powers in the CBA. I would think there's a clear difference between the commissioner using his authority to suspend and ban players when there's a gray untested area, as in the 80s, and the commissioner using his authority to suspend and ban players when there's clear, explicit language in a contract between the players and the employers. Then, I'm not a lawyer, that's just my view of it.
As has been mentioned, the Commissioner has issued suspensions pursuant to BIOG under the current CBA. Most of those have gone unchallenged. A few have stated they would appeal. I'm not sure if they did, but I am not aware of any disposition where the BIOG power has not been upheld.
The suspension was moot because Grimsley asked for, and was granted, his release, and no other team tried to sign him. So the only issue was his remaining salary for the year. It was settled, rather than decided, with the team agreeing to pay the money, but to charity rather than to Grimsley.
Thanks for the correction, David. I somehow missed that.
There's a surprise. A final what? The guy doesn't know the meaning of the word. I mean, why resolve anything when you can let it fester. We should just call the guy Uncle Fester.
This is not really the case, interpretively. The Commissioner has always had the ability to act in the 'best interests' and can impose whatever sanction he wants under that power. The specific drug testing policy is an additional basis for punishment, not an exclusive one which obviates other powers.
The MLBPA has claimed it will protest if the Commisioner uses the power this way, but there's no question that he still possesses this ability and the analyses I've read suggest the union knows it can't actually do anything about it.
To the extent that he can impose penalties on players in the Mitchell Report which don't match the CBA, it's because whatever actions he's penalizing them for predate the PED provisions of the CBA.
And...there's no reason to worry about drugs in baseball ever again!
From Bad Time Charlie Schumer...
"This bill is good for every parent, every coach and every athlete who cares about kicking drugs out of sports for good," he said.
Stink
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