Probe could affect Hall of Fame hopes
McGwire, Sosa, Palmeiro, Canseco could find themselves shut out
Steroid scandal videos |
Torre speaks Mar. 30: Yankees manager Joe Torre talks with Keith Olbermann about the impending Major League Baseball steroid investigation on Countdown. |
Video: Baseball from NBC Sports |
Damon: "We'll have to wait and see" Nov. 24: Free agent Johnny Damon says that he'd like to stay with the Yankees, but he's willing to listen to any team and will have to wait and see how it shakes out. |
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So it has gone with his plan to investigate steroid use in baseball, starting with the period 2002 to the present. The words were barely out of his mouth before they were subjected to weapons-grade ridicule.
Now as a wise man — quite possibly Yogi Berra — once said: Be as critical as you want, as long as you’re fair. Maybe it’s not entirely fair to dismiss Selig’s folly — um, investigation — out of hand without considering the benefits it might bring baseball.
We’ll start with this: Perhaps information gathered in this investigation will provide clarity to Hall of Fame voters in coming years.
That voting is never easy. It is about to become infinitely more complicated, starting next December when Mark McGwire, his 583 career home runs and his aversion to yesteryear hit the ballot. He’s a lock if you go by the math. But voters like to tell you it’s about more than math.
In McGwire’s case, it’s how a voter feels about steroids and the likelihood that McGwire used them to enhance his already prodigious physical gifts. As we speak, that’s something of a judgment call.
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Rafael Palmeiro and Sammy Sosa come due after the 2010 season. The ballots between ‘06 and ‘10 (and those beyond) will be sprinkled with players whose statistics can (and perhaps ought to) be viewed with one eyebrow arched.
If the George Mitchell-led investigation turns up dirt on (hypothetically speaking) Brady Anderson, that might help bring the 2007 ballot into clearer focus. If, on the other hand, Mitchell, despite heroic efforts, can find nothing on (hypothetically) Andy Abad, that might clear a voter’s mind as he peruses the ballot in 2009.
(And it would not in any way have anything to do with the fact that Abad concluded his career with the Boston Red Sox, the team for which Mitchell currently serves as a director. It wouldn’t, it wouldn’t, it wouldn’t — Selig has promised us this.)
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