Skip navigation
Site powered by
Latest news:
msnbc.com: Top msnbc.com headlines: 5 killed in fiery wrong-way crash near New Orleans

Bonds would boycott Hall of Fame over asterisk

If Hall displays HR ball with asterisk, slugger won't step inside Cooperstown

MSNBC video
  Bonds: ‘I’ve been singled out’
Nov. 2: Nearly three months after breaking Hank Aaron's home run record, Barry Bonds is now a free agent. Watch Part II of Jim Gray’s exclusive interview with Bonds.

NEW YORK - Barry Bonds would boycott Cooperstown if the Hall of Fame displays his record-breaking home run ball with an asterisk.

That includes skipping his potential induction ceremony.

“I won’t go. I won’t be part of it,” Bonds said in an interview with MSNBC that aired Thursday night. “You can call me, but I won’t be there.”

The ball Bonds hit for home run No. 756 this season will be branded with an asterisk and sent to the Hall. Fashion designer Marc Ecko bought the ball in an online auction and set up a Web site for fans to vote on its fate. In late September, he announced fans voted to send the ball to Cooperstown with an asterisk.

Of course, the asterisk suggests Bonds’ record is tainted by alleged steroid use. The slugger has denied knowingly using performance-enhancing drugs. Fans brought signs with asterisks to ballparks this season as he neared Hank Aaron’s career home run mark.

Bonds has called Ecko “an idiot.”

“I don’t think you can put an asterisk in the game of baseball, and I don’t think that the Hall of Fame can accept an asterisk,” Bonds said. “You cannot give people the freedom, the right to alter history. You can’t do it. There’s no such thing as an asterisk in baseball.”

Hall of Fame vice president Jeff Idelson declined to comment Thursday night.

Hall president Dale Petroskey has said accepting the ball doesn’t mean the museum endorses the viewpoint that Bonds used illegal substances. He said the museum would be “delighted” to have the ball.

“It’s a historic piece of baseball history,” Petroskey said in September.

So, if the Hall goes through with the asterisk display?

“I will never be in the Hall of Fame. Never,” Bonds said. “Barry Bonds will not be there.

“That’s my emotions now. That’s how I feel now. When I decide to retire five years from now, we’ll see where they are at that moment,” he added. “We’ll see where they are at that time, and maybe I’ll reconsider. But it’s their position and where their position will be will be the determination of what my decision will be at that time.”

MSNBC video
  Barry Bonds on his home run record
Nov. 1: “Countdown’s” Keith Olberman talks to sports reporter Jim Gray about his exclusive interview with Barry Bonds, which airs immediately after their exchange.
Giants general manager Brian Sabean reiterated Thursday that the team won’t bring back Bonds next season. The seven-time NL MVP, who has spent 15 of his 22 major league seasons in San Francisco, was asked whether he will retire as a Giant.

“Yeah, it’s my house. No matter what that’s my house, no one’s going to take that away, no one ever,” Bonds answered. “No one’s going to take the love of that city of me away, ever.”

Bonds, who has 762 homers, broke Aaron’s record with a shot into the right-center seats off Washington Nationals pitcher Mike Bacsik at San Francisco on Aug. 7.

Slideshow
Image: Snee, 8, son of New York Giants player Chris Snee and head coach Coughlin's grandson plays in the confetti after the New York Giants defeated the New England Patriots in the NFL Super Bowl XLVI football game in Indianapolis
  The Week in Sports Pictures
The Giants on top of the football world, getting ready for the London Olympics and more.

more photos

Matt Murphy, a 21-year-old student and construction supervisor from New York, emerged from a scuffle holding the ball. He said he decided to sell it because he couldn’t afford to pay the taxes required to keep it.

Bonds told MSNBC he hoped to reach 764 homers because he was born in July 1964. He said he’s been working out and still is considering whether to play next season.

“I may hit two home runs so I can go home. I just think that I have a lot of game left. I think that I can help a team with a championship,” Bonds said. “I’m a hell of a part-time player, too.”

Bonds said he won’t talk to George Mitchell’s staff looking into steroids use in baseball while he is under investigation in the BALCO case. A grand jury has been investigating whether Bonds committed perjury when he testified he never knowingly took performance-enhancing drugs.

“I know it ends in January, so a couple more months. But I haven’t been keeping up with it. Not at all,” Bonds said. “I have nothing to hide. I have said that before and I will say it now and I will look you in the face. I have nothing to hide, nothing. So look all you want to.”

© 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

advertisement
More news
Image: Detroit Tigers v Los Angeles Dodgers
Getty Images
Dodgers can become power

DeMarco: Plug in a well-heeled ownership group and negotiate one of those mega-bucks TV deals that are going around, and the Dodgers could become the west coast version of the New York Yankees or Boston Red Sox.

Image: San Francisco Giants v St. Louis Cardinals
Getty Images
Castrodale: Lots of marketing potential

Castrodale: The Yankees are introducing his and her fragrances? What's next?

Interactive
Rangers Spring Baseball
Maps to spring training sites
Your guide to sites in Arizona, Florida
Slideshow
Houston Astros
  Unbreakable records in baseball
A look at the most unbreakable records in baseball including Nolan Ryan's seven no-hitters.
Slideshow
Image: Albert Pujols
  The top tools of baseball
You hear a lot about the tools of baseball, but who are the best hitters, fielders and pitchers? We break it down.

more photos