Former Senator George Mitchell's drugs-in-baseball report has hit the streets, and the names come as no great surprise to me. ESPN and other sports writers are treating the mention of Roger Clemens's name with distaste. Not, of course, for Clemens, but for George Mitchell. Surely Clemens, an old man with a bionic arm and a bull's neck, can never have juiced in his lifetime.
ESPN couldn't wait to trot their legal analyst onto the set to say that Mitchell's 20-month investigation contains no real proof, and that the word of former team trainers is questionable. After interviewing the legal analyst, ESPN went on to a football story, and an NBA story. They ended their newscast with a hokey sequence about funny news conferences from head coaches. In other words, they buried it.
Sportscasters never fail to make me laugh. ESPN tops the list as the biggest sycophants, and all other sportscaster and writers take their cue from the network.
The sports writers should be ashamed of themselves. Are they trying to tell us that there is no proof whatsoever of drug use in baseball, and that they never heard whispers of it while they covered teams around the country? What a joke. Jose Canseco came out two years ago with his tattle-tales, Jason Grimsley was busted by the FBI for purchasing HGH, Troy Glaus was caught with drug receipts, Barry Bonds has been indicted by the Feds, and Jason Giambi admitted juicing and apologized for it.
You have to ask yourself, how is it that sports writers have not been unearthing these stories for the past ten years? The answer is simple: sports writers kiss the ass of every athlete they come across, because if they do not, they won't get 'access.' Gaining access also means keeping mum about the dirty laundry that they might trip over in the locker room.
The players that have been juicing should be ashamed to be on this list, but the sports writers should be equally embarrassed. Once again they have proven to be the most cynical people to ever hold a pen. I place no value in anything they say regarding sports. One minute they're defending Marion Jones to the hilt, the next minute they're holding the Kleenex while she cries in shame on the courthouse steps.
Egotistical to the hilt, shameless liars, incompetent reporters. Anything they say about the Mitchell report must be taken with a massive grain of salt, because all of them are in The Club of big league sports. They hob nob with players past and present. Indeed, many sports "analysts" on the tube are themselves former players. ESPN's John Kruk has come out as saying that he wished baseball had kept this quiet and dealt with it internally. I'll bet you do, Kruk. Half the guys on the list are your pals (not that we would ever know it; it should strike fans as remarkable that sports analysts never admit a full disclosure statement when defending a former teammate).
The rest of the baseball off season will be a wash, as the sports reporters desperately try to bury this story. Their line will be that the fans don't care because attendance is up and the game is doing well. So what? This house of liars and cheats needs to be cleaned up, and the sooner the better. Besides, I'm not sure if I buy the argument that the fans don't care. Last night, Roger Clemens would have been a shoo-in for the hall of fame. Today, an ESPN poll has 46% or fans saying he shouldn't get in.
Another analyst on ESPN has said that many more players than the ones in the report are probably juicing, so what are you going to do, get rid of them all? I say, "Sure."
It'll never happen, but I wouldn't mind it in the least. Fire everyone in MLB over the age of 23. Bring in college kids and minor league prospects. Begin the league anew, and end this miserable baseball generation, the worst in the sport since the Black Sox scandal.
By the way. Here's the list. Strange we never saw most of these names until now. Enjoy the ride down Juice Lane.
Lenny Dykstra
David Segui
Larry Bigbie
Brian Roberts
Jack Cust
Tim Laker
Josias Manzanillo
Todd Hundley
Mark Carreon
Hal Morris
Matt Franco
Rondell White
Andy Pettitte
Roger Clemens
Chuck Knoblauch
Jason Grimsley
Gregg Zaun
David Justice
F.P. Santangelo
Glenallen Hill
Mo Vaughn
Denny Neagle
Ron Villone
Ryan Franklin
Chris Donnels
Todd Williams
Phil Hiatt
Todd Pratt
Kevin Young
Mike Lansing
Cody McKay
Kent Mercker
Adam Piatt
Miguel Tejada
Jason Christiansen
Mike Stanton
Stephen Randolph
Jerry Hairston
Paul Lo Duca
Adam Riggs
Bart Miadich
Fernando Vina
Kevin Brown
Eric Gagne
Mike Bell
Matt Herges
Gary Bennett
Jim Parque
Brendan Donnelly
Chad Allen
Jeff Williams
Exavier "Nook" Logan
Howie Clark
Paxton Crawford
Ken Caminiti
Rafael Palmeiro
Luis Perez
Derrick Turnbow
Ricky Bones
Ricky Stone
The following players were cited under "Alleged Internet Purchases of
Performance Enhancing Substances By Players in Major League Baseball."
Rick Ankiel
David Bell
Paul Byrd
Jose Canseco
Jay Gibbons
Troy Glaus
Jason Grimsley
Jose Guillen
Darren Holmes
Gary Matthews Jr.
John Rocker
Scott Schoeneweis
Ismael Valdez
Matt Williams
Steve Woodard
The following players were linked through BALCO:
Benito Santiago
Gary Sheffield
Randy Velarde
Jason Giambi
Jeremy Giambi
Bobby Estalella
Barry Bonds
Marvin Benard
Photo: AP
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