Barry Bonds

10 February 2009

Alex Rodriguez could have taken the approach of baseball legends Barry Bonds, Roger Clemens and Mark McGwire, but he didn't. He took an approach similar to less notable star Jason Giambi. A-Rod honed up to the report and took the blame that he deserved. He did not claim to not know what it was, he did not play the victim. He took the high road and took responsibility for his actions.

Continue reading "Alex Rodriguez admits it: Does this ..."

Posted by Cameron Clow | No comments yet

5 December 2008

even if it screws a few people over) is, at least in my opinion, the best policy.

I mean, look at Barry Bonds...he's still trying to defend himself, saying that he never "knowingly" took steroids.  What a joke!  Roger Clemens went through the same process.  Sammy Sosa forgot how to speak English when asked about 'roids, and Mark McGwire "won't talk about the past".  Really, the only two guys to ever come clean about their substance use lately have been Jose Canseco and Jason Giambi.  Canseco is a nut and can't be given much credit (besides getting people thinking about the topic), so really I only respect Giambi for his honesty.

Continue reading "Hard To Take Sides On Steroid Issues"

Posted by Zach Koenig | No comments yet

10 June 2008

Lets look at the numbers.

Barry Bonds: 762 HR
AB/HR: 12.92
AB/HR before roids (2001): 15.09
HR/RBI ratio: 38%
HR/H ratio: 26%

Hank Aaron: 755 HR
AB/HR: 16.38

Continue reading "Ken Griffey Junior: Ranking the 600 club"

Posted by Z.V. Sanders | 1 comment

12 May 2008

I'm a Ryan Braun fan, and it's not hard to see why. He homered tonight for the fourth time in two games--two two-HR games in a row. Ever since he was brought up early last season, that's what he's done: hit the heck out of the ball. Doubles (he was second in the league last year with 13), home runs (his 34 last season put him in fifth place in the NL, and his 43 through the past two seasons is the fastest pace ever), both of these in spite of fewer than 500 ABs last year.

Continue reading "The Brawn of Braun"

Posted by Street Reporter | No comments yet

6 May 2008

As the hurricane of destruction that is Roger Clemens' personal and professional life gathers strength like a tropical storm reaching the balmy waters of the Gulf of Mexico, the storm has enveloped its latest victim: country star Mindy McCready. The Daily News reported last week that Clemens had carried on a decade-long affair with McCready, a family friend, ever since she was fifteen and he twenty-eight. (I should add that I'm following the media designation of McCready as a "star," even though I couldn't pick her out of a lineup of McSteamy, Matthew McConaghey, and the McDonald's McRib. Then again, I don't really follow country music--more to the point, I run far, far away from it at every opportunity).

Continue reading "Defending Clemens--Sort of"

Posted by Street Reporter | No comments yet

27 February 2008

y were not able to do when Bonds was there.

 For 15 years, the focal point of the Giants was Barry Bonds.  No one knew who was on the Giants because they were never able to sign free agents with big names because they did not want anyone interferring with Bonds image.  Or Bonds did not want anyone to take the spotlight off of him.  When they did sign free agents, it was underachievers.  The Giants let Jeff Kent get away because he was getting in the way of Bonds.  Papers quoted the team as "Bonds and the 24 other players."  Since 2002, the Giants were never able to contend because they spent all their money on Bonds.  These are new days now.

Continue reading "Gone Bonds Gone: Giants Now able to Relax"

Posted by Ryan Neiman | No comments yet

21 February 2008

  

       WHO WILL PLAY? 

Barry Bonds and Roger Clemens are two people that changed the sport of baseball forever.  One might look at this statement and say, “Of course they did.  Bonds took down the most prestigious records in baseball by hitting more dingers than good Old Hank.  He has given the sport more publicity and has made it more popular.  Clemens is a superhero for all of us.  A man whose career was falling apart, quickly changed turned it around and showed the 40’s were the new 20’s.  With all those Cy Young’s, he is one of the best pitchers in history.”  I would tell you, “Nope, that isn’t how they changed it.  That is how they ruined the sport.”  You would then look at me funny and walk away.  Go ahead, walk away from the truth.  The truth is these men have tainted this sport and have embarrassed the players in the generation before them.

Continue reading "Bonds or Clemens? Who Will play in 2008?"

Posted by Ryan Neiman | No comments yet


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