Leslie Gottlieb (
lesliepear) wrote2007-12-13 02:56 pm
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I think this is a very concise summary from CNN (breaking news e-mail)
-- MLB steroid report: Use widespread, includes biggest stars
I'm not sure what I think about it yet.
I'm not sure what I think about it yet.
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ETA Not all of the players named were named for steroids. Some were implicated in use of Human Growth Hormone, and there might have been other substances as well. Furthermore, the terms of the report don't differentiate one-time use from chronic use.
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In any event, the ones who took steroids have likely sentenced themselves to some rather profound health problems down the road - and maybe not too far down the road. I also have no problem with players and owners being slammed in the court of public opinion, and I hope what happened to McGwire (rejection in his first Hall of Fame vote) is repeated many times.
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Judge the ones who did, sure, if you know for sure that they did, based on their own admissions or clear documentary evidence. But, what about the ones where there's suspicion but no smoking gun. And, for what it's worth, right now there's more compelling evidence against Paul Lo Duca than against Mark McGwire.
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• Doping was not prohibited by league rules in the past, so it's not fair for baseball to punish players for breaking rules made after the violations happened. (But if they doped after anti-doping rules, they should have their butts nailed to the wall.)
• Doping, while not prohibited by league rules in the past, was still cheating, just not a form of cheating that was explicitly prohibited. Players deserve shaming for it (footnotes in the record books, for example), if not formal punishment.
• Doping has been a violation of prescription drug law for much longer than baseball has cared, so a player could be clean under baseball rules, but still guilty of a crime (unless the stuff was prescribed by a doctor with a loose prescription pad, in which case the legal situation is fuzzier).
• If players violated the law, they might be in violation of a league policy demanding a certain degree of respect for the law. If the league has a rule against felony convictions, for example, a player who doped before the anti-doping rule might be in violation of league rules if he's convicted. (But almost no players have been prosecuted, so that's unlikely.)
• The side-effects are nasty. That in itself is a punishment.