Major League Baseball Week That Was (4/24/2013)

David Ortiz was beloved before, but his speech post-marathon attacks made it that much greater
David Ortiz was beloved before, but his speech post-marathon attacks made him that much greater

Another week, another set of fun things that went on in this wonderful game called baseball. Lets get on with it! Continue reading “Major League Baseball Week That Was (4/24/2013)”

Major League Baseball 2013: The Week That Was (4/17/2013)

MLB: Los Angeles Dodgers at San Diego PadresThis is a day late, but lots to get to from the week that was in major league baseball. Onward.

Major League Baseball 2013: Happenings From Opening Week In The Bigs

Justin Upton is batting .423, with six home runs and an OPS of 1.641 for the Braves
Justin Upton is batting .423, with six home runs and an OPS of 1.641 for the Braves

I know it has only been a week, but how exciting is it to have baseball back? So many things happened opening week it will be hard to put it in one list. Lets give it a try, eh? (the “eh” is for all my Blue Jay fans out there) Continue reading “Major League Baseball 2013: Happenings From Opening Week In The Bigs”

The Locker Major League Baseball Preview 2013: National League Central

Adam Wainwright, who signed a 5-year, $97.5 million contract extension, will look to put the Cardinals back atop the division in 2013
Adam Wainwright, who signed a 5-year, $97.5 million contract extension, will be key for the Cards in 2013

The National Central Division is one in transition. The Reds have a great team, but the rotation might let them down enough to not reach full potential. Continue reading “The Locker Major League Baseball Preview 2013: National League Central”

Ranking Major League Baseball’s Offseason Part, 2: The Winners

Newly acquired Trevor Bauer and the Cleveland Indians look to make strides in 2013
Newly acquired Trevor Bauer and the Cleveland Indians look to make strides in 2013

Yesterday I reviewed the teams that I thought could have done a little more this past hot stove season. Today I want to discuss the “winners” of the offseason. Lets get right to it. Continue reading “Ranking Major League Baseball’s Offseason Part, 2: The Winners”

Major League Baseball Power Rankings Week 4 (4/30/2012)

Late edition of my weekly power rankings this weekend after a packed weekend. The Rangers, Nationals, Braves and Dodgers continue their recent stretches of great baseball, the Boston Red Sox have shown new life, and one team takes a nosedive. On to it!

  1. Texas Rangers (17-6)- Since his first start, Yu Darvish has given up three earned runs in 27.1 innings pitched; striking out 28 batters and lowering his season opening ERA from 7.94 to 2.18 to go along with a 4-0 start. Continue reading “Major League Baseball Power Rankings Week 4 (4/30/2012)”

Major League Baseball Power Rankings Week 3 (4/23/2012)

Week three power rankings see the Rangers on top for the second consecutive week. Braves and Nationals are rising fast after solid weeks.

  1. Texas Rangers (13-3)- at 13-3 not much going wrong for this ball club. Adrian Beltre currently sitting out with a strained hamstring injury. Also would love to get Elvis Andrus going (.230 BA, 1 steal, 11 K’s) Continue reading “Major League Baseball Power Rankings Week 3 (4/23/2012)”

MLB Season 2012: Brandon Phillips, Reds Reach Six-Year Deal

The Cincinnati Reds reached an agreement with All-Star second basemen Brandon Phillips on Tuesday. The deal is for six-years, $72.5 million dollars. In 2017 Phillips will make $14 million dollars.  Continue reading “MLB Season 2012: Brandon Phillips, Reds Reach Six-Year Deal”

MLB 2012: Joey Votto, Matt Cain Deals Show Baseball’s New Way Of Business

Joey Votto and Matt Cain are signs of the times in Major League Baseball.

While other sports might be battling for shares and pieces of pies for the players or more control for the owners, baseball is playing by, what seems to be, a completely different set of rules.  Continue reading “MLB 2012: Joey Votto, Matt Cain Deals Show Baseball’s New Way Of Business”

The “Steroid Era” Cost A Generation Pure Baseball

Have you ever spoken to an older baseball fan about the game? Take a moment and listen how they speak about the players of “their generation.” The reverence someone who grew up in the 1950’s had for players such as Mickey Mantle, Duke Snider, Willie Mays and Jackie Robinson. Look ahead to the 1970’s and you hear of the beauty of the game played by Mike Schmidt, Reggie Jackson, Joe Morgan and others. That doesn’t even begin to describe how they speak about such legends as Hank Aaron, Ted Williams, Roberto Clemente, Lou Gehrig and Babe Ruth. Those were history makers and the general public saw that. I grew up in a neighborhood where my neighbor made it to a big league camp as a pitcher and he talked to me about his competition that spring in Indians camp. He described one player in particular who had “one of the best fastballs he had ever seen.” That man was Bob Feller. He “wisely chose a career in the military” he would tell me; just one of the many examples of stories from the past. That generation was privileged (some) to play against and see these extraordinary baseball players play and knew that when they were finished they would take their place among the other legends in Cooperstown.

There was no doubt. There were no arguments.

I was born in 1984. That year the Tigers were the toast of Baseball and the game was still relatively innocent. I began my interest in the sport in 1989 (coincidentally my first team was the Tigers) and that year would be significant. You see, that year, the Oakland Athletics were the best team in baseball. Led by two young mashers that fascinated the sports world in ways one could never imagine. Those sluggers were Mark McGwire and Jose Canseco. At one point in their careers when spoken of they were considered the best players in the world. Their names would have a different significance years later. 

In 1990, a young superstar was blossoming before the nations eyes in Pittsburgh Pennsylvania. “The Modern Day Clemente” was just one of the many labels placed on this 25-year old left fielder, whose father made a pretty good name in the game of baseball in his own right. Barry Bonds, son of Bobby and godson to Willie Mays, started his prime years by not only making his first All-Star team but also winning the first of seven National League Most Valuable Player awards. He would go on to break the most storied record in American sports history. Yet the American public would have more doubts and questions about his personal dealings than adoration regarding his accomplishments.  

Some years before, almost running parallel to the young superstar in Pittsburgh, was a young Texan by the name of Roger Clemens who began his career the year I was born. He started in Boston, where he would lead the Red Sox to the 1986 American League pennant with a Cy Young campaign. He set a record for strikeouts in a game that season with 20 against the Seattle Mariners. Ten years later he duplicated that feat against the Detroit Tigers in his last season in a Red Sox uniform. He would have a career renaissance in Toronto the next season that, in most cases, would seem like a man vindicated in proving the naysayers in Boston wrong for casting him aside like a 33 year old pitcher in decline. Now we look back and wonder if they were they right all along?

Baseball is a game that because of its history is special. Debating and discussing historical topics in baseball is a way of life for fans; whether they are a purist of the game or otherwise. I get envious when I talk to people who saw the greats play because they do it without a hint of doubt that it was done the right way. They speak of Hank Aaron knowing that every one of his 755 home runs cleared ballpark fences aided only by his strong hands and wrists. When they talk about Sandy Koufax and his blistering fastball and knee-shaking curve they know they saw a man who truly gave all that the good lord was willing to grant him until an arthritic condition pushed him out of the game. 

This is why we should feel cheated. I’ve spent a long time wondering why these and others deciding to cheat themselves out of honest and productive careers should matter to me. But as time goes on and it comes time for some of those names to be up for consideration for Cooperstown I realize exactly why it should matter. When I talk about some of the legends that have put up record-breaking numbers from my generation there is skepticism. Every time I mention a name from my era I have to preface it with “if he did it clean.” Historians will look at the time when I was a kid growing up watching baseball and point out that our best pitcher and hitter could both miss out on the hall of fame because they cheated. They will look at the modern day single-season home run leaders and scoff at their accomplishments; most notably because one of them at the top of the list has admitted to doing it the wrong way. They will also consider some of them a clog on the hall of fame ballot, keeping honest players from getting their just recognition.

It’s a shame, really.

But I still have players I can look up to. Tony Gwynn was the smartest hitter since Ted Williams and I’m able to debate that confidently. The most cerebral pitcher spent the majority of his career in my home state of Georgia and I feel lucky to have been able to watch Greg Maddux pitch every five days. Of course the two guys that followed him, Tom Glavine and John Smoltz, weren’t second fiddles by any stretch. I also can look at Cal Ripken, Jr. and not feel wary. Chipper Jones and Derek Jeter, who are two modern day ambassadors for their leagues, are still putting up numbers, but doing so gracefully with age.

It’s funny how it plays out, life. Looking back again, I began following baseball in 1989, which was the year the Oakland Athletics won the World Series behind those aforementioned mashers. In 1990 the Athletics, led again by McGwire and Canseco, made it to the World Series but were swept by an underdog Cincinnati ball team in a matchup labeled “David vs. Goliath.” A 26-year old future hall of famer who would be inducted in 2012 led that team. His name synonymous with the legends we speak about with such reverence but this time he is a representation of my generation. That player?

Barry Larkin.

 You see although we feel cheated, we can still take solace in the fact that clean always wins out in the end. While Barry Larkin was inducted into the hall of fame the others are still pleading their case through court systems and with the writers who vote on such matters. There should be no exceptions, and I don’t believe in such a stipulation as the “steroid era.” 

They cheated us out of an opportunity to speak of them as true legends without a hint of doubt. It is only fair they be punished for doing so.