I know the Baseball Hall of Fame election process is
flawed. It has been flawed since the
Hall was created back in 1936. Bill
James wrote an entire book basically hypothesizing why Don Sutton should be elected
to the Hall, even though we disagree on this particular player’s
worthiness. Who should be enshrined and
who should not is a great argument. I
believe that Joe Jackson should be allowed to enter as his lifetime ban ended
with his life in 1951. I also believe
the hit king, Pete Rose—Charlie Hustle, should be allowed to enter the hall if
it is the last event he is ever allowed to have with Major League
Baseball.
So that brings us to the current and upcoming crop of
players who are now eligible and are going to become eligible over the next 20
or so years. Mark McGwire, Sammy Sosa,
Jeff Bagwell, Rafael Palmero, Alex Rodriguez, Barry Bonds, Rogers Clemens, Mike
Piazza, Ken Caminiti, Ivan Rodriguez, Manny
Ramirez, Vlad Guererro, Miguel Tejeda, Andy Petitte, Jason Giambi, John
Kruk, Lenny Dykstra, Juan Gonzalez, Chase Utley, Ryan Howard, etc. Which ones
are guilty? Which ones are guilty by
association? The only names I hear that people agree are clean are Greg Maddux,
Trevor Hoffman, Mariano Rivera, and Derek Jeter, but who knows for sure?
I don’t know a baseball fan that did not stand up and cheer
in 1998 every time McGwire and Sosa crushed the balls out of the yard. Remember, it was four short years after the
devastating strike that caused temporary commissioner for life Bud Selig to
cancel the World Series (when the Montreal Expos were in first place and flush
with talent). Many fans were disgusted
and turned off from the game. They were
not coming to the parks.
That all changed in ’98.
When Slammin’ Sammy and Mashing Mark came to town everyone came
back. They came early to watch batting
practice, they brought their kids, and they bought shirts, and pennants and
beer and balls and Cracker Jack, and baseball was back. I went to a Mets/Cardinals game that year and
watched McGwire go yard on #50 and #51.
It was great. When a reporter
found andro in McGwire’s locker, the reporter was chastised by other reporters
for invading a player’s personal space. Barry
Bonds, who was perhaps the best player of that generation, did not need to jack
up his home run totals, he was already a first ballot hall of famer, but he saw
the adoration and the dollars, and wanted a taste of the clear. Many other players did too. Many other players did not. Except for the Mitchell Report and Jose
Canseco, we might never who is actually “guilty” of using a substance that was
never actually prohibited by the sanctioning body (MLB) at the time they played.
It took years before they could agree to legislate steroids
out of the game. That leaves us with the
steroid era from 1988 (I pick this as this was the beginning of the Bash Brothers,
McGwire and Canseco in Oakland) to 2005.
How do we deal with this period as fans evaluating player greatness? If
you believe Canseco a majority of players were using. Others put the number closer to 50%. Some might argue that only the superstars
were juiced, but I don’t believe that.
What is the number? I don’t
think it matters.
We need to look consistently across the eras and evaluate
them for what they were. We don’t
compare anyone from the dead ball era to Babe Ruth. We don’t compare today’s pitchers to Bob
Gibson. We just have to admit this is
the steroid era and go from there. Steroids in baseball were a fact and the
Baseball Writers of America (BBWA) need to come to grips with it. Their recent voting for the Hall of Fame is a
joke. (Barry Larkin? Don’t get me
started). They have anointed themselves the judge and
jury and have single handedly determined any known user is not getting into the
Hall.
On one side that is fine, but what about Jeff Bagwell? You can argue his numbers until you are blue
in the face and in my opinion he is a border line HOF candidate, but the
writers have deemed him guilty with only anecdotal evidence. He was not named anywhere in any report, not
in anyone’s book, other than beating up a friend of mine in college, he had a
very clean reputation while he played.
He played his whole career in Houston with Craig Biggio. He played a few years with Clemens and
Pettite. Does that make him a known
user? I don’t think so, and I don’t like
the precedent.
There is only one way to deal with this era and that is
simply to compare them to other players who played at the same time. Throw out the old adage 500 HR (bye-bye Fred
McGriff), 3000 hits (bye-bye Palmiero) and other standards that guaranteed Hall
of Fame stature. When you consider your Hall
of Fame batter, the writers should ask, was this player considered the best at
his position, was he a true star who excelled in baseball during this era? These players that lined the pockets of the
owners, that filled the stands with fans, and sold newspapers with columns
written by the BBWA are now being ostracized for simply trying to play the game better faster and stronger, and like it
or not, within the rules. Buck O’Neil,
the great advocate and spokesman for the Negro League could relate to the
rationale of the players trying to get an edge.
No court of law that I am aware of, will allow a law to be applied to
before it was enacted and that is exactly what the BBWA is doing, and it is not
fair.
Do I support steroid usage?
Absolutely not! Do I think it is bad for the sport? Absolutely!
What is baseball, and specifically the writers, trying to do by burying
these baseball icons that personified the sport during this era? Are we supposed to believe that those home runs
never happened? That Hank Aaron is still
the home run king? That Roger Maris still holds the single season record with
61? No.
We need the Baseball Writers of America to admit they are
just as culpable in the steroid era, as MLB, the managers who turned the other
way and the players who either did or did not juice, but turned the other way. The BBWA needs to swallow their medicine and
vote in the best players from this era.
If you want to add a statement on Barry Bonds plaque that says “steroid
user” that is fine by me. Let future
generations know that these are the players that played during this era, they
were the best, and they only did it to play the game they love, the same game
we love.
Updated 1/9/2013 -
Voters pitch shutout for HOF class of 2013
Let's face it: Hall of Fame is a mess
Updated 1/9/2013 -
Voters pitch shutout for HOF class of 2013
Let's face it: Hall of Fame is a mess
Do we really want a Hall of Fame that basically tries to pretend that none of those men ever played baseball? That none of that happened? Or that none of that should have happened?
Hey, here's a bulletin for you: It happened.
The '90s happened. The first few years of the 21st century happened. I saw it with my very own eyeballs. So did you.
It all happened, on the lush green fields of North America, as crowds roared and cash registers rung. It … all … happened.
And how did it happen? The sport let it happen. That's how.
Bud Selig let it happen. The union let it happen. The owners let it happen. The managers let it happen. The agents let it happen. The media let it happen. Front offices across the continent let it happen. And the players never stepped up to stop it from happening.
It … all … happened. And no one in baseball has ever done anything, even after all these years, to make it un-happen, if you know what I mean.
No records have been stripped. No championships have been stricken from anyone's permanent record. No numbers have been changed. No asterisks have been stamped in any record book.
It … all … happened.
1 comment:
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