SportsRandom

Reading sports blogs has ruined sports for me. Just like becoming a cop ruined cop shows for me. I used to enjoy watching and reading about sports. Now I watch hoping someone will screw up, or do something strange, so I can rip them. First in my own mind... now in a blog of my own, so I can talk about whatever I please. Here's hoping I can contribute to someone else looking for all the fault in the world surrounding the sports we love.

Sunday, January 07, 2007

Mark McGwire

And others. Its time for Hall of Fame voting and the "steroid era" has begun. My thought is simple. What did the guy do as a baseball player and is it good enough to be a Hall of Famer? A players "character" is one of the voting criteria, but shouldn't be. Voters can too easily inject their own values into that area. Now a baseball writer who didn't like a player for some reason can just say he didn't vote for him because he thinks he cheated. Well Ty Cobb was a racist. Gaylord Perry cheated and admitted that he did. Players used to use "greenies". Will they go back and remove guys? Did McGwire do something that the rules said he couldn't? Was he caught? Was he the only one? Can you tell me that no pitcher he faced did the same thing?

Wasn't there a time where the pool of men that baseball drew from a bit smaller? Whites only? Smaller country? Less foreign players? Now there is an abundance of "specialized" pitchers. On the flip side, before pro football and basketball were so popular, all the best athletes played baseball. Could some guys have compiled the career achievements had they not gone to war? Wasn't it known that the mound at Dodger stadium was always a little higher? All the mounds were lowered by rule change at some point. Grass has been kept long for groundball pitchers. Foul lines slanted to benefit bunters. Players now know a lot more about nutrition and working out. Has anyone noticed that records in all sports fall as time passes?

How long can we keep going with all the differences between the times before we realize that times change, the game changes, so the only thing that matters is what the heck a guy did in the game when he played.

For me it comes down to this. It’s the Baseball Hall of Fame, dudes. Relax, it’s a game. Put the best players in the thing and if you are so morally concerned, put your concern on the plaque, "Dude accomplished 'this', people thought he did 'this' to help himself". Like all the sportswriters who vote are so perfect, huh? You know that they take voting for the hall of fame too serious when you still hear about not voting for a guy in his first year of eligibility because "that's the way it is".

Mark McGwire belongs in the Hall of Fame for what he did as a player. Yeah, so does Pete Rose. And Shoeless Joe Jackson. And so will Barry Bonds.

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2 Comments:

At Sun Jan 07, 01:48:00 PM, Blogger gg said...

I don't buy that for a second. Ty Cobb's racism and Perry's spitball did not give them the advantage that pumping himself full or 'roids gave McGwire. He's a disgrace to the sport and he and Bonds will never make the hall.

 
At Mon Jan 08, 11:12:00 PM, Blogger MoonHopper said...

Cobb was only mentioned for the "morality" issue. I may be fusing morality and cheating when I shouldn't. Cheaters ARE different than simply immoral people. If you have an imaginary line where you are no longer eligible... well, its hard to decide where that line is, and harder to imagine the hall voters coming up with a realistic way to decide.

Would someone as openly racist as Cobb be such a sure thing in today's world?

Back to cheating, is what McGwire/Bonds/Palmiero did WORSE cheating than things that have happened in the past? Will we ever know the whole truth and what the advantages actually were? Personally I think that the cheating methods are getting better with time and we will have a new problem soon (if we already don't). Maybe that line was crossed, as you suggest, but I imagine it goes a lot deeper. We may end up excluding everyone who played in the 90's. Wouldn't that be fun.

I just think that what McGwire did in his time is worthy of the hall.

 

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