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Gonzaleznut
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I posted this on the Beckett forums and wanted to throw it out here. Please keep an open and reasonable mind as you read this. Even still, many of you will probably think I am nuts.
My take on all of this...(not an issue that will be going away anytime soon, BTW)
Either you vote on players based on the merit of their contibution to the game and disregard steroids altogether or you let no one in who played from 1990 through 2005. My drastic stance on this issue is based on logic and not emotion. Let me explain.
It is stupid to hold the players accountable for using any advantage they could to be the best at their job. Hell, i use PEDs (I drink coffee in the morning). I promise you it enhances my performance. MLB should have done a better job policing the situation instead of turning a blind eye. It really doesn't matter whose fault it was that it got out of hand...players or MLB. It was the nature of the game at the time.
Do you hold it against Babe Ruth that the baseball itself was changed to allow for the ball to be hit further after the "dead ball era of the early 1900s? Do you hold it against Bob Gibson because MLB raised the mound ushering in a great pitching renaissance in the 1960s? Do you blame Mickey Mantle for taking so many pain killers that most of us would die just so he could play on two legs that were a wreck?
No to all of the above. You take each players contribution to the game considering the era in which they played.
Every player that played during this era is under scrutiny. It doesn't matter if they have been named in any bogus report or a tell all book. EVERY player. Yes, that includes Jeter, Biggio, and all the other guys whom their fans will claim as "clean" and untouchable with regards to this subject.
How can you truly KNOW who is guilty of using PEDs and who isn't with 100% certainty? The answer is NONE!! My point is that it doesn't matter and we shouldn't care. Base their inclusion into the HOF on what they did for the game. Period.
I will use a player I like a lot as an example. Ivan Rodriguez. Do I think Pudge used PEDs? Probably. Do I care? No. Pudge was one of the top defensive catchers throughout his career. He has caught in more games than any other player in history. He has a trophy case full of Gold Gloves, All-Star appearances, even a World Series ring and an MVP. That is what he should be judged on. He gets in. Why? Because he was on of the best players in the game during the era in which he played.
Based on that simple logic (ignoring the PED issue altogether) then of course Arod and Bonds are in. McGwire and Sosa are no brainers too. Palmeiro, Ramirez, and Clemens are in easily. Sheffield and Giambi aren't good enough with or without PEDs. BTW, Jeter and Biggio are shoo ins too.
Make the arguement about a player's HOF worthiness about the players accomplishments on the field, not about steroids.
Either let them all in or none of them. There is no middle ground.
My take on all of this...(not an issue that will be going away anytime soon, BTW)
Either you vote on players based on the merit of their contibution to the game and disregard steroids altogether or you let no one in who played from 1990 through 2005. My drastic stance on this issue is based on logic and not emotion. Let me explain.
It is stupid to hold the players accountable for using any advantage they could to be the best at their job. Hell, i use PEDs (I drink coffee in the morning). I promise you it enhances my performance. MLB should have done a better job policing the situation instead of turning a blind eye. It really doesn't matter whose fault it was that it got out of hand...players or MLB. It was the nature of the game at the time.
Do you hold it against Babe Ruth that the baseball itself was changed to allow for the ball to be hit further after the "dead ball era of the early 1900s? Do you hold it against Bob Gibson because MLB raised the mound ushering in a great pitching renaissance in the 1960s? Do you blame Mickey Mantle for taking so many pain killers that most of us would die just so he could play on two legs that were a wreck?
No to all of the above. You take each players contribution to the game considering the era in which they played.
Every player that played during this era is under scrutiny. It doesn't matter if they have been named in any bogus report or a tell all book. EVERY player. Yes, that includes Jeter, Biggio, and all the other guys whom their fans will claim as "clean" and untouchable with regards to this subject.
How can you truly KNOW who is guilty of using PEDs and who isn't with 100% certainty? The answer is NONE!! My point is that it doesn't matter and we shouldn't care. Base their inclusion into the HOF on what they did for the game. Period.
I will use a player I like a lot as an example. Ivan Rodriguez. Do I think Pudge used PEDs? Probably. Do I care? No. Pudge was one of the top defensive catchers throughout his career. He has caught in more games than any other player in history. He has a trophy case full of Gold Gloves, All-Star appearances, even a World Series ring and an MVP. That is what he should be judged on. He gets in. Why? Because he was on of the best players in the game during the era in which he played.
Based on that simple logic (ignoring the PED issue altogether) then of course Arod and Bonds are in. McGwire and Sosa are no brainers too. Palmeiro, Ramirez, and Clemens are in easily. Sheffield and Giambi aren't good enough with or without PEDs. BTW, Jeter and Biggio are shoo ins too.
Make the arguement about a player's HOF worthiness about the players accomplishments on the field, not about steroids.
Either let them all in or none of them. There is no middle ground.