Thursday, August 9, 2007

My Case for Barry

So everybody likes to hate on Barry Bonds.  I have grown increasingly tired of the attacks.  From people selling books about him to the never-ending coverage of angry posts against him that were shown on ESPNews yesterday.  It has become incredibly tiresome. 

There were even people who were saying that he does not belong in the Hall of Fame, which may be the dumbest thing ever proclaimed about Major League Baseball. 

Well, because of all of this hatred and disdain, I thought I would put in a good word for Mr. Bonds.  I believe ‘Game of Shadows’ chronicled Barry’s steroid use in either 1999 or 2000, and for the sake of convenience, I will just go with everything pre-2000.  By that season, Barry had already amassed 445 homeruns and 460 stolen bases.  That’s right, Barry was a 400-400 guy long before anyone gave a damn about steroids.  In fact, those were the Rennaissance years for the MLB.  Big Mac hit 70 during the summer when Slammin’ Sammy was nipping at his heels and the cookie-cutter 1970’s dual stadiums were being demolished for Camden Yark copycats.  Nobody knew about steroids and nobody wanted to know, including Bud Selig.  Everybody just wanted to relish in the spotlight.

Now, Barry is the face of everything that is wrong with this era, the so-called steroid era.  I have a question, does that make the 1970’s the coke-era or the pre-Jackie Robinson days the mighty-whitey era?  Maybe the MLB should be like artists and have periods.  Who could forget the MLB blue period.  Much like the steroid period, in the blue period, everybody was doing it no matter what the team colors were.

Well, let us take a look at another player that could possibly be the face of this steroid era.  Notice the incredible spike in production during the two-year stint in Toronto.  In the four years leading up to his move to Toronto, Roger won a total of 40 games, lost 39 games, struck out 717 batters (an average of 179 per season) and seemed well over-the-hill.  Then Rog goes to Toronto, it is a whole other country with different standards about acquiring performance enhancers you know, and in two seasons reasserts himself as a dominant pitcher.  In two seasons north of the border, Roger won 41 games, more than his previous four seasons, while only losing 13 games and striking out an astonishing  563 hitters.  Oh, and his ERA dropped an entire point in that time.  But wait, there’s more!  Roger got his fat deal in New York and returned to ordinary in his first two seasons in the Bronx before making a huge push in 1998 to get more money.  In ‘98 he once again topped the 20 win and 200 strikeout marks all while losing a total of THREE games.  Roger was a superhuman by that point.  Then he retired after the 2003 season only to resurface in Houston late in camp and put together an 18-4 season with 218 strikeouts and a sub-3.00 ERA in a hitter’s park.  That was only his 20th MLB season, so obviously such greatness is easily feasible.  What did he do in year 21 you ask?  Well, he only had 13 wins, but he did manage to have an ERA of 1.87.  Read that again.  An ERA of 1.87.  Seriously.  In a hitter’s park.  ERAs weren’t even that low during the ‘Dead Ball’ Period.  (Already sticking with the period theme.)  Just throwing some gaudy numbers out there for all of you numbers people.

Perhaps you would like some information about this guy.  Gagne began his career with the Dodgers in 1999 when he started five games.  In those five games, he struck out a batter per inning in 30 innings of work.  He showed some skills, but then in 2000 Gagne went 4-6 with only 79 strikeouts in 101 innings of work and posted a 5.15 ERA.  Gagne continued to struggle in 2001 by going 6-7 with an ERA of 4.75.  He struck out 130 batters in 151 innings of work, and seemed destined to return to the minors.  Instead, the Dodgers moved Gagne to the bullpen for one more shot in 2001.  What did Gagne do, you ask?  Well, he simply put together the greatest three year stretch any closer has ever managed to do by saving 52, 55, and 45 games in 2002, 2003, and 2004 respectively.  Oh, and his ERA only climbed above a 2.00 in 2004 when it was an K2-like 2.19.  Lets not forget his little consecutive game streak that was such a big deal during that stretch.  He also struck out 365 batters during that stretch despite pitching only 246.9 innings, which translates to nearly 1.5 strikeouts per inning.  Not too shabby for a power pitcher that could not get the job done early in his career.

You say ’so what’ and ‘Roger added his splitter to make him better.’  Well, I counter with the fact that Barry, once a free-swinging speedster, much like his father, developed patience in San Francisco.  While working with Willie Mays and Bobby Bonds, Barry became a much more patient hitter.  He also shortened his swing to the picture-perfect swing that we frequently see today.  His attack of the ball is so compact that there is minimal room for error on his part.  Young Barry used to get his arms extended to the point that he was over swinging and getting around the ball.  He was trying to hit homeruns and often overextended his hands leading to frequent strikeouts or pulling groundballs that should have been linedrives the other way.  (As a young college ballplayer playing in a short home park, I too know what that was like.)

Barry became so patient and confident at the plate that he was able to wait for the perfect mistake in every at-bat.  Once more, he was so functionally perfect that he was able to turn that one mistake into a homerun, whenever that mistake came, which was typically once every two games.  For a four year stretch, Barry saw fewer hittable pitches than any other hitter in the league.  Yet, his obscene abilities and fundamentally sound approach (and alleged added muscle) allowed him to take advantage of those pitches with a much higher success rate than the average Major League hitter.  Screw it, he took advantage of those pitches at a much higher success rate than the greatest of Major League hitters. 

I remember a game three years ago where Barry was fooled by a Jason Isringhausen splitter (when Izzy still had good stuff), and I mean completely fooled by it with his body weight already shifting forward.  Yet, Barry managed to stay on the ball completely and rip a line shot into the power alley in right-center in Name-of-the-Week Stadium (what is it now, AT&T Park?).  It was absolutely incredible.  The steroids did not make him able to hit that pitch, and only one or two other hitters would have been able to stay on and behind the pitch enough even after being completely fooled to the point that they could get good wood on it.  The alleged juice probably helped that ball carry a few feet over the wall, but what he did in that at-bat (and not how far the ball traveled) was the incredible part.  Just like Vlad Guerrero has an ability to hit a ball no matter where it is pitched, Barry Bonds has the patience to wait for the absolute perfect time to swing and his obscene bat control allows him the ability to seemingly hit a homerun whenever he so chooses.  I don’t think it is the steroids, I just think he is a mutant, and I am jealous.  Even when I picked up the perfect pitch coming out of the pitcher’s hand, and knew it was my pitch to hit, I still could not/did not know that I was hitting it out.  Several times I did, but several times I got greedy, went long with the arms or dipped the back shoulder and ended up flying out to right.  Barry does not do that.  So respect his amazing abilities, and know that he is just better than you.

Seriously, look at the numbers.  If you made a mistake while pitching to Barry at any point during the late 1990’s to early 2000’s, he was getting a hit off of you.  Most likely, it was going to be a homerun.  Was he on supplements, or even more?  Certainly.  But we have already seen how clean even the worst hitters in the game are.  Heck, even middle releivers are on the juice.  Take a look at this list of players that have tested positive, admitted to some form of use, or have been implicated during this period.  That list is just scratching the surface.  All those holier-than-thou people who claim that he cheated the game are somewhate hypocritical.   The fans (and the League office) stood and cheered when two likable characters chased 61, yet turned up their noses when a far better, yet surly player went after Hank Aaron. 

I believe a much greater number of players used steroids or other federally banned substances that were not tested for in Major League Baseball during that period, and we will never know the true effect they had on the game.  Barry was already one of the greatest players ever, and the homerun mark only cemented his position atop the greats of the game.  Banned substances could not do that for David Segui. 

So relax people.  There are far worse things going on in the world of sports and the world in general.  You have the opportunity to see something/someone that infrequently comes along (approximately ever 35 years).  Enjoy it for what it is worth, a quick break from reality.  Barry plays a game that we all dreamed about as kids, and in those dreams, we were larger than life.  It just so happens that today’s ballplayers actually are artificially larger than life. 

For the record: after we watched Barry hit 756, I turned to the soon to be Mrs. Hoops and told her that Barry would go on a tear now that 756 is out of the way.  757 took off last night, and I expect at least three more bombs before the end of next week.  Barry will easily finish the season with 30+ homeruns.  Not too bad for a 43-year-old with no knees and a blown elbow.

Quick note: While doing some research, I stumbled upon a recap of the moronic “Turn Forward the Clock” promotion that MLB did in 1998 and 1999 at Uniwatch.  Man was idea ever terrible.  If you want to relive those monstrosities, go to this link.

Urban Watch:  Tune to the Indianapolis Colts-Dallas Cowboys preseason game this evening and root for the Legend.  He’ll be the only white receiver for Da ‘Boys and he wears number 15. 

Posted by drose523 at 15:50:23 | Permalink | Comments (4)

Thursday, August 2, 2007

Dodger Fans Are Hypocrites

I know, I know, a second post in a day.  Like I said, I’m halfway out the door here.

I was watching some of the Giants-Dodgers game last night and caught Barry Bonds’ at-bat in the eighth inning to hear the loud, raucous booing going on.  I know this is one of the greatest rivalries in baseball, second only to the Yankees-Red Sox (only for publicity’s sake). 

And, I know that Barry is Dodger-faithful enemy number one.  That all is completely obvious. 

Though last night, I could not help but think of the Dodger fans as hypocrites.  Not only is Los Angeles the kingdom of fake people.  Per capita there is more fake-baking and silicon, botox, and plastic walking around there than anywhere else. 

Not only that, these are the same fans that joyously rooted for Eric Gagne when he was shattering save records.  I, and I am not the only one, truly believe that Gagne, who never could cut it at the Major League level, came out of nowhere to have the greatest two seasons a closer has EVER had.  Then, just as fast as his rise, he had serious injury issues and vanished, only to resurface with a fastball at least 9 mph slower.  Hmmm.  That was clean stuff.

Another Dodger favorite that may not be as squeaky clean as everyone wants to believe is Nomar Garciaparra.  During his heyday with the Red Sox, Nomah was a little more bloated than he is now, and there was a lot more pop in the line drives he used to rip.  After a long bout with injury issues, Nomah is now a contact hitter who will occasionally spring for a long ball, like he did last night.  I’m not calling him a steroid user, I’m just asking a question.  That is all.

This was just a quick little rant.  You all can go back to hating Barry Bonds for doing the exact same thing at least 27% of MLB was doing during the late 90’s and early 00’s. 

Posted by drose523 at 22:13:42 | Permalink | No Comments »

Monday, July 23, 2007

One Crazy Weekend

And I’m not referring to my lady friend’s bachelorette party in Chicago (or my makeshift bachelor party in Louisville this weekend which served as a precursor to the upcoming festivities in Las Vegas). 

I am actually referring to the Tim Donaghy fiasco that could potentially rip up the NBA.  If you do not know what I am referring to, you obviously live in a cave (or a van down by the river).  You should probably study up on the subject, because right now Mr. Donaghy is all over the ESPN.com front page.  The Sports Guy even had a fresh column ready to read this morning.  (Check it out here).

More importantly, several people have already started throwing stuff on YouTube regarding games that Donaghy officiated.  Some of you may remember one of these games fondly, Game 3 of the Spurs-Suns series, which we had been referring to as the “knee-to-groin” game.  If you need a refresher, check out the link.  I’m pretty sure that I mentioned how awful I thought the officiating was in that game as well, and I was a fan of the team that ALLEGEDLY got officiating assistance. 

This is terrible news for the NBA, which has always had those rumors floating around about potential fixing, no matter how outlandish those ideas were.  You know what I am referring to.

Now it has been released that Donaghy has retained an attorney who has developed the reputation for working with ’whistle blowers.’  Who will Donaghy talk about, his mob ties or other officials?  This will get a lot worse before it gets any better. 

For right now, I will wait to post anything else about this subject.  What I would like to do, is find out the list of games that Tim Donaghy officiated over the past two seasons and then get a report about the betting lines and outcomes of those games.  How many games did Donaghy actually alter?  Another question to ponder is how far back does this go?  Just go ahead and Google Tim Donaghy’s name and see what else you can find out.  This could get really ugly, and it will give those NBA haters plenty of material for the coming seasons.

In other criminal news, the NFL is set to open training camps, and Michael Vick may have some more indictments coming, this time from the State of Virginia.  Unfortunately for Vick and the Falcons, this is not his first legal battle since coming into the league.  Who can forget the story of Ron Mexico?  Mr. Vick and the Falcons are rumored to be working on the voluntary leave of absence that I mentioned at the beginning of last week.  I would highly recommend it.

At least Major League Baseball was able to stay out of the negative press over the weekend.  Thank goodness Barry Bonds only hit two homeruns last Thursday at Wrigley Field.  Although, with all the nastiness that is surrounding the other two big sports, maybe this is the perfect time for Barry to break the record.  It may be as under-the-radar as possible right now, and after all, steroids versus the slaughtering of animals, which one do you think is worse? 

Posted by drose523 at 18:50:22 | Permalink | No Comments »

Thursday, July 12, 2007

Gotta Love Baseball Cards

I was checking my emails this morning and stumbled across a great forward from one of my old college roommates.  Typically, I would not be able to discuss what is contained in these forwards, simply because this site is at worst PG-13 and some of the stuff I receive would offend Howard Stern.

However, this email had the heading “FW: ROOKIE CARD FOR SALE!” and I thought it was an outstanding commentary on the state of baseball.  Check it out for yourself:

 

I ‘m selling one of my Barry Bonds rookie cards to the highest bidder.  As an aside, I do not believe the steroid stories about Barry and believe he will be completely exonerated of all claims against him and land firmly in the Hall of fame someday.

I am including a scanned copy of the card. As you can see, it’s in mint condition. 


 

Posted by drose523 at 13:26:09 | Permalink | No Comments »

Friday, July 6, 2007

I Knew He Was Juicing

That always intimidating middle-infielder, Neifi Perez, has been busted for juicing.  He has to sit out 25 games now.  Obviously, the ‘roids have been helping Nef out.  Check out his career numbers

If Perez was taking illegal performance enhancers, doesn’t this sort of support my theory of ’blame one, blame all’ when it comes to steroids.  Barry Bonds continues to take his beating, yet far too many players get the benefit of the doubt, which is, for lack of a better word, crap.   If guys hitting .172 and seldom seeig the field are on juice during baseball’s toughest drug-testing period, how many guys were openly popping pills, rubbing creams, and injecting juice when nobody was being tested and everybody was pining for homeruns?  It’s outrageous. 

Oh, and speaking of performance-enhancing supplements, the Tour de France is set to get under way.  I think this is steroids’ (and other performance enhancers’) best time of year.  The Tour de France gets under way.  MLB is in full swing, and some players might need that little ‘extra boost’ for the Homerun Derby, or to get through the ‘dog days of summer’. 

I fear that I am becoming somewhat jaded, but at least I have the greatest power forward of all time’s future teammates tipping off as we speak.  NBA Summer League actions has begun with the Spurs facing the 76ers. 

Posted by drose523 at 21:20:12 | Permalink | No Comments »

Monday, July 2, 2007

Let the Frenzy Begin

Well, we are less than two days into the free agent moratorium, and several players have already netted themselves some nice pocket change. 

  • Jason Kapono turned one stellar free agent season into a hefty payday.  It is rumored that Kapono will ink a 4 year, $24 million deal after the moratorium is lifted.  I guess that means that Morris Peterson (and his penicillin) will be playing elsewhere next season.
  • Luke Walton will remain a Laker for an estimated $30 million
  • Fabulous Oberto will continue to wear black and silver, but the length of his new deal has not been disclosed.

Hey, I did not say that it was exciting stuff yet, this is only the beginning.  However, in the next few days, you can expect to see Chauncey Billups, Mo Williams, and Vince Carter all agree to deals with their current teams.  Also, continue to scour the newswire, because I expect Kevin Garnett to be a Warrior by the end of the week.  I think Minnesota will cave for Patrick O’Bryant instead of Andris Biedrins, as long as the other pieces are still included in the deal.  Jermaine O’Neal will probably be moving to New Jersey as well.  If the Nets can get O’Neal and be able to unload the soon-to-be always injured Richard Jefferson and Nenad Kristic’s surgically repaired knee, that would be a steal.  O’Neal will be able to anchor that defense and contribute offensively when Vince Carter starts hoisting 27-footers to avoid any contact. 

In other news, Barry Bonds will get the opportunity to start for the National League in the upcoming All Star Game in San Francisco.  I personally am glad to hear this news.  Black cloud or not, Barry Bonds will soon be the all-time homerun record holder.  Sure, he did it in an era where steroids were more important to baseball players than hard cups were, but at this point, I really don’t care.  There are far too many players that I honestly believe took steroids, yet were never tested or found positive.  At this point, I’m acting under the impression that all players during this era took steroids, or none of them did.  Unfortunately, ‘Quantum Leap’ was cancelled a long time ago, so we won’t get Scott Bakula to go back in time to find out which guys took steroids. 

I will just rattle off some names of players (off the top of my head) that I think took steroids.  **Be warned, I have no way of verifying this information.  This is just one man’s ignorant opinion based on chin size, and I spent no more than 7 minutes thinking of names.**

  • Barry Bonds
  • Jason Giambi
  • Jeremy Giambi
  • Juan Gonzalez
  • Ivan Rodriguez
  • Mark McGwire
  • Roger Clemens
  • Eric Gagne
  • Miguel Tejada
  • Rafael Palmiero
  • Ken Caminetti
  • Dean Palmer
  • Darren Daulton
  • Dave Hollins
  • Bud Selig (just checking to see if you were paying attention)
  • Albert Belle
  • Jason Grimsley
  • Guillermo Mota
  • J.C. Romero
  • Armando Benitez
  • Jared Wright, and
  • Chris Berman

Boomer Berman had to take steroids, nobody has ballooned like Boomer over the past few years (try 15 years) yet continues to deliver material like it was his first day in the office in 1979.  You cannot keep that pace.  Even Beeno Cook faltered.  I would have also included Keith Jackson, but he was never associated with baseball, and was basically the same size for thirty years. 

Posted by drose523 at 15:16:32 | Permalink | Comments (1) »