Category | Baseball

Steroid use in baseball? Blame the fans!

A friend and co-worker of mine, Gerry Fey was discussing the A-Rod, steroid scandal and he brought to my attention an interesting commentary written in the Baltimore Sun, by columnist David Steele that puts much of the blame on baseball fans. Yes, you heard that right- the fans!

Well, Gerry, a long-time baseball fan (and someone who follows the intricacies of the sport better than I) was outraged, so I asked him to put some of his thoughts down to share with you all.

I couldn’t have said it any better! I hope you enjoy:

I can’t quite understand why David Steele would blame the fans for not sending a proper message to Major League Baseball. Because of some players’ screw-ups and others in the sport choosing to ignore the obvious, Steele would have us, the fans, stop going to games.Let me tell you, that’s like blaming the small-time Wall Street investors for the sub-prime mortgage mess. The problem is not the game, just like the problem isn’t the free-market system on Wall Street. The problem is the players who cheated and those who allowed it to happen. By Mr Steele’s argument then, I guess we need to stop reading the sports section of the newspaper, stop watching almost all sports on TV and stop going to ALL sporting events. Because let me tell you, if you’ve got a problem with baseball, you must have a problem with all Olympic sports, hockey, cycling, and yes, the precious NFL. All of these sports have had performance-drug problems (and still do).I, for one, am happy things are being done about it in baseball. These investigations are good, and slowly, the sport is cleaning up its act. I frankly prefer this to the “stick your head in the sand” mentality that exists in the NFL by coaches, officials, fans and writers. I’m assuming you’ve been in an NFL locker room (at least I hope you have). You don’t think that steroids or, most-importantly, HGH isn’t a huge problem in the NFL? You think it’s “natural” for a 6-foot-1, 245-pound linebacker to run a 4.3 40-yard dash? By the way, that’s .08 seconds faster than Ben Johnson ran in the first 40 yards of his 100-meter gold-medal finish at the 1988 Olympics. You’ll remember that Ben Johnson tested positive for steroids in that race.

Talk about blame, how about blaming all the writers/columnists who are now taking as many shots as they can at baseball instead of doing some serious investigating of America’s biggest and most-guilty sport, the NFL.

-Gerry Fey

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Limbo Teams: The St. Louis Browns

If you ask someone “who are the Browns?” they can likely come up with the obvious answer, the Cleveland Browns of the National Football League, one of the oldest teams around with a storied history.  But there was a time when the color brown was a bit more popular in sports nomenclature.

In Baseball there were the St. Louis Browns.  In fact there were numerous iterations of the St. Louis Browns: the future Cardinals and the future Orioles (both teams changed to birds, odd).  Such monochrome names really lend their legacies to that first professional baseball club, the Cincinnati Red Stockings.  As I wrote over here, teams in the earlier years of baseball didn’t really have much in the way of official names, but rather nicknames derived from uniform elements or some kind of regional connection.  The Reds had amassed a good deal of popularity in a barn storming tour in which they thoroughly dominated.  So in 1875 the Brown Stockings came about.  The team lasted for three seasons before going belly up.  There was a game fixing scandal with the Louisville Grays that sent both teams out of business.

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Callout: The Angry Fan

The world of sports is changing around us.  ESPN reports (I use the term loosely) constantly.  The major media outlets are accused of pandering.  If you want the real story on anything you have to go to the internet and the blogs.  But then of course they are accused of being based on conjecture and inherently critical and negative.  I for one don’t find anything terribly surprising about this.

Case in point, the recent Yankee spending spree this off season.  Sports outlets are cranking out their lists of winners in losers in all this.  I’m left a bit out of sorts in this whole situation because everyone is playing in the mud, there are no real winners.  It’s only a matter of time before they start posting their “What’s Wrong with Baseball” stories.

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Limbo Teams: The Kansas City Athletics

The long strange journey of the Athletics before they came to Oakland saw one failed team turn into another.  A thirteen year experiment beginning in 1955 brought the first season of the Kansas City Athletics.  The former Philadelphia team, it’s reverential powerhouse days behind it, was broke and was purchased and moved by industrialist Arnold Johnson. 

Johnson is not remembered very favorably.  That is normal for owners who move teams, but what is not normal is that he isn’t remembered fondly in the city where he brought a team either.  His concern is said to have been more for profits than for the people of Kansas City.  The team brought with it much excitement and the A’s enjoyed record attendance in their first year.  Unfortunately they never saw anywhere near those kinds of numbers again.

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Limbo Teams: The Philadelphia Athletics

Teams move around.  It’s a shame (usually) but it’s a reality of the business.  But there’s this strange feeling like whatever you grow up watching, that’s the correct formation and anything different is weird.  As such, when I hear of the Philadelphia Athletics, I think that there’s no way that can be right.

First and foremost, Philly is a noted sports town.  As one of the few cities in America to host a team in every major sport, as well as a reputation for passion even in blundering awful times, the dedication of Philly fans can’t be questioned.  So when I hear of the Philadelphia Athletics, my first reaction is, “Philly lost a team?”

As I wrote in the playoff preview name explanation, the Philadelphia Phillies are the longest continuous team in baseball but who also had little success in championships (who just won a World Series, congrats to the winners).  Well the team that moved cities not once, but twice, was an absolute powerhouse, winning 9 pennants and 5 World Series from 1902 to 1931.

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