Friday, August 16, 2013

Baseball Needs to Get it Right

I have been away from blogging the past couple of months as summer is an extremely busy time for me.  My family comes first, I umpire baseball games, for cash, and oh yeah, that 9-5 thing has me traveling all over the country for the first time in 6 years.

A lot has happened over the last two months that would have given me plenty of material to last me a lifetime.  Aaron Hernandez, Whitey Bulger, Rolling Stone cover blunder and the Boston strangler case came back to life, kind of.  All of these had my mind turning but I just did not have time to punch my thoughts out.

The year plus long suspension of Alex Rodriguez for his role in a steroid investigation got me thinking about the state of baseball and its history.  Baseball had had a black eye for nearly twenty years and it keeps getting bigger and bigger.  Baseball ignored years of obvious steroid use by its players to try and restore its image that darkened because of the 1994 players strike.

So now what does baseball do in this time of turmoil?  They really don't have a right to suspend Rodriguez for over two hundred games because he had never been suspended before.  Major League Baseball (MLB) can hide behind their claim of "best interest of the game" clause all they want, but they have been ignoring it all along, why now?

This year, for the first time in 48 years, there was not a living member inducted into the Hall of Fame.  How can that be? Barry Bonds was eligible for induction into the Hall of Fame last year.  He is the all-time Home Run leader with 762.  He holds the single-season record for home runs with 73.  Let us not forget he also stole 514 bases.  How can he be not elected into the Hall of Fame?

What about Roger Clemens? He won seven Cy Young Awards, had 354 wins and 4,672 strikeouts.  If he is not getting in the Hall of Fame then I have bad news for all the pitchers dominating the league, you aren't good enough to get into the Hall of Fame.

So I am being a little facetious right now if you haven't guessed.  Do I think Rodriguez should have been suspended? Yes, I do.  Do I think Bonds and Clemens deserve to be in the Hall of Fame?  That's a trickier question because they were well on their way before taking steroids.  The problem is much bigger than entrance into the Hall and suspensions.

Who is to blame in all of this? Everybody, we all bought in, but the baseball media are the ones that should come under scrutiny for this.  The hypocrisy that the baseball media shows is unbelievable.  They glorified these players as they were chasing records and titles.  They voted for them for MVP's and Cy Young's, then they don't vote those same players for entrance into the Hall of Fame.  I guess being on both sides of the coin is a safe place to be.

So if Bonds and Clemens can't gain entry into the Hall of Fame because of their possible link to steroids you would have to assume that their stats are null in void, right?  Wrong!  This is the worst part of the argument.  The career leader in Home Runs, not in the Hall of Fame.  The single season Home Run record holder, not in the Hall of Fame.  The single game strikeout record holder, not in the Hall of Fame.  Let us not forget about the career hits leader who was banned from baseball (as a manager) and is not in the Hall of Fame as a player, but that's a different argument.

What point is baseball trying to make with keeping Bonds and Clemens out of the Hall of Fame?  They want to rid baseball from any links to steroid use.  That's fine, I am on board with that.  There are currently two problems with the way they are going about it.  Baseball had not had a steroid policy when all these records were being broken, so technically no rules were broken.  It's not an excuse, just a fact.  Secondly, if you want to keep players out of the Hall of Fame, then you keep them all out, stats included.  Roger Maris should be re-instated as the single season Home Run hitter, Hank Aaron should be re-instated as the all-time Home Run leader and Kerry Wood would be your single game strikeout holder.  That would send the message.

It's time for baseball to right the ship and if means hitting the reset button then so be it.  The fact of the matter is that the MLB lost fans a long time ago and they really don't care that Barry Bonds and Roger Clemens are not in the Hall of Fame, I certainly don't.  I am a baseball purest and lost interest in the MLB a long time ago.

3D
If you don't take it from me, ask my wife

No comments:

Post a Comment