Sunday, February 08, 2009

A-Fraud

It's funny that just few days into the whole "Joe Torre called A-Rod, A-Fraud in his book" controversy, A-Rod has indeed been exposed as a fraud. Sports Illustrated has broken the story that Alex Rodriguez was tested positive for not one, but two different steroids in 2003. This was when MLB was doing anonymous testing for God knows what. He was apparently one of 104 dudes who tested positive then and this was one of the reasons MLB and the union eventually adopted more comprehensive testing. It turns out the testing was not very anonymous after all. I am sure the other 103 players should be very happy knowing that. It was hidden from George Mitchell and his report too, but suddenly it's leaking like a sieve now.

This was the hottest sports news of the weekend because A-Rod is the biggest name in the sport of baseball. It's another blow to the credibility of this era and all the great numbers from this era. A-Rod has great numbers and MLB was hoping he would be the guy who leads MLB and it's records in to the new, supposedly cleaner era. But now, he is just another cheater and MLB has to live with him and his records for the next several years just like they did with Bonds and his tainted numbers. And of course, the inevitable "does he belong in the hall of fame?" question is already coming out. The only positive in all this for A-Rod is that, if he weathers the storm, he has many years to recover from this. He would really be in trouble legacy-wise if he retired in a year or two.

Am I surprised? Not really. I had no specific doubts or opinion on A-Rod and I always liked him as a player. But are any of us stupid enough to trust anybody in this game anymore? I always had a problem when experts like Peter Gammons came out and said things like "clean" players like Adam Dunn and Ken Griffey want more testing because they don't want to be looked at as cheaters. My reaction was always why use any names? How do you know those are "clean" players? They will say they want more testing, but how does Gammons know they are not lying? For all we know, they could be the biggest "roiders" ever. Same with A-Rod or any other name you want to insert in that Gammons comment. It turns out A-Rod is not clean after all though many people assumed he was and he is done now.

If A-Rod thought he had issues with the fans and was already called A-Fraud for no apparent reason, I can't imagine what he has to endure the next couple of years. Of course, he has refused to comment on the controversy as of now and that pretty much means he is guilty in my book. Now he can deny it all or come clean and for some reason, America likes the guys who come clean. I don't understand the psychology of it, but thats been the history so far with Jason Giambi and Andy Pettite and Giambi wouldn't even tell us what he was apologizing for! Now A-Rod has to face the music and he is going to get killed until he wins a championship. But I think he minimizes the damage by accepting it, apologizing for it and claiming he stopped roiding up in 2003 and has never done it again. Lets see how this thing plays out.

Now I want to know the other 103 names. That will make this more fun.

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