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Aquarian
Weekly 2/23/05
REALITY CHECK
EVERYTHING
WE WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT STEROIDS…BUT WERE AFRAID TO ASK
I've
spent more time in Major League clubhouses than most people not
garnering a full-time paycheck to either play the game or cover
it. And I predominantly did so during what is fast being noted
as the Golden Age of Steroids: 1988 to late 1994, before the great
fiscal implosion when whiney owners cried poverty and greedy players
harrumphed all the way to closing down the season. There was a
lot of joking about "the juice" back then. Kind of a locker-room
jock thing you sometimes overhear, because you're there. That's
the nut of journalism, a professor once told me. "Half the battle
is just being there," he would say. And I was.
I
talked City Lights bookstore with Will Clark, listened to Guns
N' Roses with Don Mattingly, and conversed on hitting, food, films,
and fashion with George Brett, Kirby Puckett and Tony Gwynn. I
chatted with Ken Griffey jr. about rap music and sports cars while
Randy Johnson put his fist through a wall. I watched Lenny Dykstra
nearly take a clubhouse boy's head off with a nine iron. I did
lunch with Rickey Henderson, whom I more than suspected had a
crush on my girlfriend. I was even snubbed by Cal Ripken jr.,
David Justice and Nolan Ryan all in the same week.
Those
were the fun moments in an otherwise highly competitive media
circus. It wasn't the good old days when sportswriters went "slumming"
with athletes, as my friend Roger Kahn used to call it, but it
seemed by the late 90s' when I meandered back for a few seasons
in the capacity of a radio reporter there was more of a lockdown
on players. This was when the evolution of steroid and "performance
enhancement" drugs had taken the game's brightest talent and turned
them into Greek gods, smashing baseballs and records all over
the place. By then, no one joked anymore. And they sure ain't
joking now.
In the glaring light of the BLACO investigation, which provided
evidence that Barry Bonds was a human chemical spill, leaked grand
jury testimony from Jason Giambi, a grandstanding Senate hearing,
recent FBI testimony from a decade-long investigation, spanking
new revelations from Bonds' chippy and a sensationalistic tell-all
tome penned in part by recidivist goon, Jose Conseco, there has
been an outcry from fans and the media to "clean up the game".
Thing
is everyone knew about steroids for a long time. The players damn
well knew. The aforementioned Rickey Henderson told me the entire
Oakland Athletics team laughingly dubbed the monstrous Conseco
"The Bionic Cuban", and in a more public display the late Ken
Caminiti announced to Sports Illustrated's Tom Verducci that he
won the National League MVP award jacked to the tits on steroids.
The owners knew too. Of course they knew. They had plenty of inside
information and a slew of photos of bars and girls and the other
off-the-field recreations of their multi-million dollar investments.
Why wouldn't they know? And as much as they loathe admitting it,
the media jock-sniffers knew as well. But they were too busy falling
over themselves to either worship or slander these poor bastards
they covered that they ignored the obvious signs. Ignored or chose
to ignore for the paycheck.
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These
are facts, not paranoid rantings. Look at the recent unprecedented
explosion of power hitting numbers since the mid-90s', which
rivals the "Live Ball Era" in the way that this is the "Live
Player Era"
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The
last thing I need to read right now is another sanctimonious hack-job
by that bleating dwarf Mike Lupica on sadness and outrage when
he made a fortune on a book celebrating the McGuire/Sosa home
run chase in '98. What a hypocritical suck ass that moron is.
Unfortunately,
for me, I haven't made a bundle from MLB. I worked for a modest,
but award-winning Westchester weekly called the North County News,
did some radio and hosted a baseball interview show on local television.
So I was more or less free to run around decrying the bloated
statistics these freaks were putting up, while my colleagues in
the sports media biz like that chickenshit Lupica were calling
me a paranoid cynic.
What
these people failed to equate was the game's collective insecurity
about failing to compete with the more popular NFL and Michael
Jordan's game. And all the mini-ballparks, jacked balls, and lousy
diluted pitching talent seemed to conveniently mask the Herculean
offensive numbers that were jumping off the bats of unnaturally
huge athletes, the kind of human parade floats that forced pro
football to change their policy on steroids a decade earlier.
Hey,
when baseball hit its first monetary crisis after the 1919 Black
Sox scandal when a mobster called Arnold Rothstein fixed the World
Series, the game's patriarchs, realizing the popular impact of
the newly realized home run, livened the ball. This "Live Ball
Era", of which the last Herculean freak Babe Ruth hailed, produced
some of the most ridiculous offensive numbers the game has ever
seen. Even in the late '60s' when pro football began to knock
baseball off the America's Pastime pedestal, the game invented
the Designated Hitter, a clamp down on the spitball and lowered
the pitching mounds to promote more homers, more runs, more cheering,
and bigger heroes.
These
are facts, not paranoid rantings. Look at the recent unprecedented
explosion of power hitting numbers since the mid-90s', which rivals
the "Live Ball Era" in the way that this is the "Live Player Era"
Only
two men ever hit 60 home runs in a season before 1998. From 1927,
when Ruth hit 60 homers in a season, to 1961, when a journeyman
called Roger Maris hit 61, 37 seasons passed. During that time
and until the mid-90s' only a handful of guys ever hit 50. In
fact, only two, maybe three guys hit 50 from '61 to the mid-90s'.
Since then, Mark McGuire, Sammy Sosa, and now Barry Bonds have
hit 60 or more homers six times. McGuire hit 70 in '98 and Bonds,
who claims to not realize he was taking steroids - and this from
a health nut I saw tell a reporter he doesn't shake hands because
of germs in 1991 - hit 73 a few years back. And although I will
not pour over the minutia of baseball statistics, I can conservatively
say the 50 mark has been reached three dozen or more times during
this insane run.
Where
was the outrage all along? From fans? From owners? From ESPN?
From that lying sack of monkey dung Bud Selig - Commissioner of
the Freak Show?
Was
this detonation in offensive power all crappy pitching, juiced
balls, enhanced workout regimens and advanced vitamin intake?
Consider
the plainest testimony of all, believing your eyes. Just look
at these men. Look at them in their prime, and look at them in
their mid-to-late thirties, and now forties. Can humans gain uncharted
muscle mass in months? Can a human being go from a lithe, muscular
form to a hulking beast in a few years, while managing to age
along the way?
It's a ridiculous mockery of common sense.
Should
a man's hat size increase while lifting weights? His complexion?
It's
a pathetic joke.
Now
everyone is getting righteous and giving speeches and whipping
up investigations.
Home
runs are fun. Who cares if players are drugged up?
I
enjoy the fruits of industry. Who
cares if my water supplies are contaminated?
Reality
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