+ Reply to Thread
Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast
Results 1 to 15 of 27
  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Posts
    1,598

    Steroid users soon to become public according to article in the Sun

    http://www.baltimoresun.com/sports/b...,6806701.story

    (I apologize if this belongs in the MLB section. Feel free to move it as necessary.)


  2. #2
    I remember hearing about a year and a half ago or so that there was going to be a list coming out with alot of prominent names and it was coming very soon. It never did. I wonder if this will actually become public

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Location
    Asheville, NC
    Posts
    12,197
    Yippee! More high horses for writers, bloggers, and casual fans to ride on!

    Seriously people... unless they look into MLB executives and management and what role they played in creating the culture of steroid use, this is as useful as figuring out which politicians smoked pot in college. The stuff was rampant. Maybe you can reveal a few dozen of Radomski's clients, but you're never going to prove who definitely didn't do steroids and you're never going to catch all the users. There's only one thing you can find: more scapegoats to make pathetic people feel better about themselves.

  4. #4
    Leitch's Avatar
    Leitch is offline Plus Member since 11/06 Hall of Fame Reputation Reputation Reputation Reputation Reputation Reputation Reputation Reputation Reputation Reputation
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    Baltimore, MD
    Posts
    7,806
    I hope and pray that at least half of the names on that list are of the white, no-hit, get dirty, run hard type that are so beloved by the media and hailed as the second coming of the pure, morally superior Dead Ball Era III(or is it IV?)

  5. #5
    byrdz's Avatar
    byrdz is online now Plus Member since 11/03 All-Star Reputation Reputation Reputation Reputation Reputation Reputation Reputation Reputation Reputation Reputation Reputation Reputation Reputation Reputation
    Join Date
    Oct 2003
    Location
    Santa Monica, CA
    Posts
    7,631
    Quote Originally Posted by blueberryale77 View Post
    Seriously people... unless they look into MLB executives and management and what role they played in creating the culture of steroid use, this is as useful as figuring out which politicians smoked pot in college. The stuff was rampant. Maybe you can reveal a few dozen of Radomski's clients, but you're never going to prove who definitely didn't do steroids and you're never going to catch all the users. There's only one thing you can find: more scapegoats to make pathetic people feel better about themselves.
    Well said, I just wonder when this will all be over. Hopefuly this is final scapegoat fest.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Posts
    1,598
    Quote Originally Posted by blueberryale77 View Post
    Yippee! More high horses for writers, bloggers, and casual fans to ride on!

    Seriously people... unless they look into MLB executives and management and what role they played in creating the culture of steroid use, this is as useful as figuring out which politicians smoked pot in college. The stuff was rampant. Maybe you can reveal a few dozen of Radomski's clients, but you're never going to prove who definitely didn't do steroids and you're never going to catch all the users. There's only one thing you can find: more scapegoats to make pathetic people feel better about themselves.
    1. Nobody said anything about catching all the users or proving who definitely didn't do steroids.

    2. Did typing that last line make you feel better about yourself?

  7. #7
    beaner's Avatar
    beaner is offline Double-A Hangouter - Plus Member since 12/04 Hall of Fame Reputation Reputation Reputation Reputation Reputation Reputation Reputation Reputation Reputation Reputation Reputation Reputation Reputation Reputation Reputation
    Join Date
    Dec 2003
    Location
    Eldersburg, Md
    Posts
    7,165
    Quote Originally Posted by blueberryale77 View Post
    Yippee! More high horses for writers, bloggers, and casual fans to ride on!

    Seriously people... unless they look into MLB executives and management and what role they played in creating the culture of steroid use, this is as useful as figuring out which politicians smoked pot in college. The stuff was rampant. Maybe you can reveal a few dozen of Radomski's clients, but you're never going to prove who definitely didn't do steroids and you're never going to catch all the users. There's only one thing you can find: more scapegoats to make pathetic people feel better about themselves.
    Amen! I can't wait to hear about the "Integrity of the Game" again.

  8. #8
    rolliefingers's Avatar
    rolliefingers is offline Senior Hangouter - Plus Member Since 12/04 Reputation
    Reputation
    Join Date
    Jul 2004
    Location
    Remington
    Posts
    11,980
    Quote Originally Posted by Leitch View Post
    I hope and pray that at least half of the names on that list are of the white, no-hit, get dirty, run hard type that are so beloved by the media and hailed as the second coming of the pure, morally superior Dead Ball Era III(or is it IV?)
    I'm lookin' at YOU, Eckstein.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Location
    Asheville, NC
    Posts
    12,197
    Quote Originally Posted by oriole_way View Post
    1. Nobody said anything about catching all the users or proving who definitely didn't do steroids.
    Well if you're not going to catch all the users, does it really help to point fingers at a few while holding up others who are just as guilty as examples of all that is "right" with the sport? Like with many other hot button social issues, there is a lot of room for racism or other types of bias to creep in to who the public views as "guilty" or "innocent" when you have only a few of the facts. Plus, again, there's the issue of the complicity of MLB in all of this which is not being addressed. MLB is pushing the witch hunt thing as a way to deflect attention from themselves and the public is buying into in hook line and sinker.

    2. Did typing that last line make you feel better about yourself?
    Not in the least. I hate having to talk about this. But as a baseball fan who a) views steroid users as human beings who made a mistake which is going to hurt them down the road more than it hurts anyone else, b) is sick and tired of not being able to enjoy the game because all anybody talks about is steroids, and c) is tired of seeing issues about the lifestyles of celebrities and entertainers trump stories about matters of actual importance to our society (aids, poverty, war, corporate greed, the environment, you name it), I get mad when I hear that there's going to be yet another big press release about steroids which is going to get more press coverage than the soldiers who die in Iraq that day or the children who can't get proper health care.

    I know there are those who say, "it doesn't matter because the people who are obsessing over this wouldn't concern themselves with global issues anyway, they'd just be paying more attention to Paris Hilton if this weren't around," and I do see that point but this is more than that. This is something the federal government has gotten involved in, the "serious" media covers on a pretty regular basis, etc. Really, think about it. Relative to the amount of time and money that have been spent investigating steroids, is the "integrity" of a GAME (which has always had cheaters, as well as worse kinds of criminals and thugs) really worth all that compared to all the other projects in the world that could actually improve people's lives if they had more funding? Does the game really gain "integrity" by taking a hard line with drug users when it does less about players who commit acts of violence off the field?

    And yeah, I find the self-righteous indignation offensive. Can everyone who's jumping up and down about how steroid using baseball players are horrible individuals who have no redeeming value and deserve to rot in hell with the rapists and child molesters say that they've never used drugs? Never borrowed answers to an exam? Copied homework? Fudged info on their resume? Done anything to unfairly gain advantage over someone else? I highly doubt it.

    By the way, I wasn't objecting to you posting the article on here, but to the content of the article itself. You certainly have every right to start discussions on here about what's printed in the popular press or anywhere else. I just thought the author was way out of line with his moral outrage. I wish he were so outraged about our kids being harmed by evil Chinese industrialists who put lead paint in their toys to save a little on production costs instead of athletes screwing up their own lives.

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Oct 2003
    Location
    Hazzard County
    Posts
    9,597
    Quote Originally Posted by blueberryale77 View Post
    Yippee! More high horses for writers, bloggers, and casual fans to ride on!

    Seriously people... unless they look into MLB executives and management and what role they played in creating the culture of steroid use, this is as useful as figuring out which politicians smoked pot in college. The stuff was rampant. Maybe you can reveal a few dozen of Radomski's clients, but you're never going to prove who definitely didn't do steroids and you're never going to catch all the users. There's only one thing you can find: more scapegoats to make pathetic people feel better about themselves.
    I don't know what it is exactly, but I can never buy into holding anyone responsible for broken rules/law than the offender themselves. Maybe I'm painting with a broad brush, but whether we're talking about steroids or mass murderers (unless some tangible mental defect exists), blaming executives or abusive dads, it's hogwash.

    Obviously the impact/influence from front office types was negative, but ultimately no one is responsible but the steroids abusers themselves.

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Location
    Asheville, NC
    Posts
    12,197
    Quote Originally Posted by ScottieBaseball View Post
    I don't know what it is exactly, but I can never buy into holding anyone responsible for broken rules/law than the offender themselves. Maybe I'm painting with a broad brush, but whether we're talking about steroids or mass murderers (unless some tangible mental defect exists), blaming executives or abusive dads, it's hogwash.

    Obviously the impact/influence from front office types was negative, but ultimately no one is responsible but the steroids abusers themselves.
    The thing is, mass murderers hurt other people, very badly. Steroid users hurt primarily themselves. If someone provides material support to a mass murderer or harbors them while they're a fugitive from the law, they get punished too. Steroids are illegal for good reason and those found guilty of possessing them should face fines, community service, mandatory rehab, etc. the same way they would for any other illegal drug whether or not someone influenced them to do it. They also deserve a chance to rehabilitate themselves afterward just like any other person who has a drug problem. I just don't think Bud Selig is in much of a position to be handing out penalties for steroid use when he willingly and happily profited from it for years and continues to refuse to take any responsibility for that. If he resigned and there were a new commissioner who was not involved in MLB between 1995 and 2005, maybe that person would have some ground to stand on, but Selig does not and neither do most of his staff or most of the other owners. Most of the guys who used steroids in any significant quantity will pay the price eventually whether or not their transgressions make the front page of the newspaper.

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Posts
    4,510
    Quote Originally Posted by ScottieBaseball View Post
    I don't know what it is exactly, but I can never buy into holding anyone responsible for broken rules/law than the offender themselves. Maybe I'm painting with a broad brush, but whether we're talking about steroids or mass murderers (unless some tangible mental defect exists), blaming executives or abusive dads, it's hogwash.

    Obviously the impact/influence from front office types was negative, but ultimately no one is responsible but the steroids abusers themselves.
    I agree.

    At least Selig gave the issue of drug testing lip service for many years.

    Don Fehr was the chief obstructionist who would have nothing to do with any drug testing until he was forced into it by Congress.

    The MLBPA is largely responsible for the public perception of baseball as a steroid ridden sport.

    The MLBPA did NOTHING to elevate the innocent. They did NOTHING to expose the cheats. So, they have themselves to blame for the innocent players being guilty of association.

  13. #13
    Join Date
    Sep 2003
    Location
    Waynesbar and Grill, PA
    Posts
    48,386
    One word in that article scares me. Scores of players. A score is 20. As in 4 score and 7 years ago, our forefathers brought forth unto this continent a new nation...

    (4 * 20 ) + 7 = 87

    87 years ago (from 1863...) was 1776.


    Anyways... scores, plural, means 40 players (more than one per team), 60 (2 per team), 80 (almost 3 per team), etc.

    2, 3, 4, more? Per team. This could be a horribly bad revelation.

  14. #14
    Join Date
    May 2004
    Posts
    314
    Quote Originally Posted by Baltoravensrule View Post
    I remember hearing about a year and a half ago or so that there was going to be a list coming out with alot of prominent names and it was coming very soon. It never did. I wonder if this will actually become public
    The list your referring to is probably the 2003 test and the 100 who tested positive, the feds have the list but it probably wont ever be released.

  15. #15
    Join Date
    Jan 2004
    Location
    Camden, DE
    Posts
    25,611
    Quote Originally Posted by scOtt View Post
    One word in that article scares me. Scores of players. A score is 20. As in 4 score and 7 years ago, our forefathers brought forth unto this continent a new nation...

    (4 * 20 ) + 7 = 87

    87 years ago (from 1863...) was 1776.


    Anyways... scores, plural, means 40 players (more than one per team), 60 (2 per team), 80 (almost 3 per team), etc.

    2, 3, 4, more? Per team. This could be a horribly bad revelation.
    Not a surprising one at all though.

Bookmarks

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts

OriolesHangout.com is an unofficial site and not associated with the Baltimore Orioles and part of Hangout Ventures LLC. Copyright ©2013 | Privacy Policy | Advertise with us