Private Affair
Dexter, Missouri · Saturday, November 7, 2009
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More juice, anyone?
Posted Thursday, May 7, 2009, at 9:36 PM
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(Photo)
50 game suspension for Manny Ramirez.

Busted!

Manny Ramirez joined a growing lineup of All-Stars linked to drugs Thursday, with the dreadlocked slugger banished for 50 games by a sport that cannot shake free from scandal.

The Dodgers organization is devastated and the city is crushed by Manny Ramirez's suspension. Fans have been crazy about Manny but now feel betrayed.

The Los Angeles Dodgers star said he did not take steroids and was prescribed medication by a doctor that contained a banned substance.

The commissioner's office didn't announce the specific violation by the 36-year-old outfielder, who apologized to the Dodgers and fans for "this whole situation."

However, testing by Major League Baseball showed that Ramirez had testosterone in his body that was not natural and came from an artificial source, two people with knowledge of the case told ESPN's Mark Fainaru-Wada and T.J. Quinn. The sources said that in addition to the artificial testosterone, Ramirez was identified as using the female fertility drug human chorionic gonadotropin, or HCG.

The sources said Ramirez was suspended for using hCG because baseball had documentation to prove his use of the drug. A Major League Baseball source said Ramirez's representatives indicated they would fight a suspension for using artificial testosterone.

Ramirez, in a statement issued by the players' union, said: "Recently, I saw a physician for a personal health issue. He gave me a medication, not a steroid, which he thought was OK to give me.

The question is do you believe Ramirez or is he just another A-Rod?


Comments
Showing comments in chronological order
[Show most recent comments first]

No, I don't believe him, but nor do I care. I'm sick of hearing about A-Rod, Clemens, and Bonds, and all the other knuckle heads that juiced up, including McGwire. MLB either needs to step up and clean it up, or give them all steroids at the start of spring training. Either way, I'll still watch.

-- Posted by BonScott on Fri, May 8, 2009, at 12:59 AM

Nope...don't believe him. His story sounds fishy to me.

-- Posted by fun2teach on Fri, May 8, 2009, at 3:18 PM

I say pump it, shoot it, snort it, rub it....anything goes! NWE meets America's Pasttime!

What a damn joke and like you say Bon, we will all still watch.

-- Posted by shannonhoon on Mon, May 11, 2009, at 10:24 AM

I say get rid of all the cheaters in baseball, this scurge on the game I love so much is very disheartening. Bring back the days of Hank Aaron, Willy Mays, George Brett, Cal Ripken, Jr., Ozzie Smith, Bob Gibson, Ernie Banks and more. Back then players respected the integrity of the game.

-- Posted by chuckd on Tue, May 12, 2009, at 12:00 PM

Speaking of George Brett....you can't say that name and not think about pine tar. Do you know why the pine tar rule was in effect?

-- Posted by greer958 on Tue, May 12, 2009, at 3:49 PM

GREER, are you putting pine tar and 'roids in the same debate? I think you are not, but just checking.

When I think George Brett, I think of Garth Brooks coming out of a piano in Kemper Arena wearing a Brett #5 jersey to open the Fresh Horses tour!!!!!!!! And pine tar. And a big wad of tobacco. And the worst call in WS history, circa 1985. And seeing Bretts final home game in Royals stadium. And getting my first book on hitting written by Brett and hitting coach Charlie Lau when I was 11. I also think about an era when steroids weren't used and the game seemed much more pure.

-- Posted by shannonhoon on Tue, May 12, 2009, at 11:48 PM

Garth in a Brett jersey? That's classy!

Definately NOT putting pine tar in the same category as steroids... Everyone knows about George Brett and the pine tar incident but very few actually understand.

Here is the story according to Wikipedia....

Playing at New York's Yankee Stadium, the Royals were trailing 4-3 with two outs in the top of the ninth and U. L. Washington on first base. In the on-deck circle, George Brett was heard remarking to a teammate, "Watch this baby fly" as he shook his bat. He then came to the plate and connected off Yankee reliever Rich "Goose" Gossage for a two-run home run and a 5-4 lead.

As Brett crossed the plate, New York manager Billy Martin approached rookie home plate umpire Tim McClelland and requested that Brett's bat be examined. Earlier in the season, Martin and other members of the Yankees had noticed the amount of pine tar used by Brett, but Martin had chosen not to say anything until the home run. One of the Yankees, third baseman Graig Nettles, recalled a similar incident involving Thurman Munson in a 1975 game against the Minnesota Twins. [1] According to Nettles' autobiography, Balls, Nettles claims that he actually informed Martin of the pine tar rule, as Nettles had previously undergone the same scrutiny with his own bat while with the Twins.

With Brett watching from the dugout, McClelland and the rest of the umpiring crew inspected the bat. Measuring the bat against the width of home plate (which is 17 inches), they determined that the amount of pine tar on the bat's handle exceeded that allowed by Rule 1.10(b) of the Major League Baseball rule book, which read that "a bat may not be covered by such a substance more than 18 inches from the tip of the handle."

The baseball bat used by Kansas City Royals third baseman George Brett in the Pine Tar Incident on July 24, 1983.

McClelland searched for Brett in the visitors' dugout, pointed at him, and signaled that he was out, his home run nullified and the game over. An enraged Brett stormed out of the dugout to confront McClelland, and had to be physically restrained by Kansas City manager Dick Howser and his teammates. (As one commentator stated, "Brett has become the first player in history to hit a game-losing home run.") Despite the furious protests of Brett and Howser, McClelland's ruling stood.

The Royals protested the game ("TAR WARS!" blared a New York Post headline), and their protest was upheld by American League president Lee MacPhail. MacPhail (who coincidentally had once been the Yankees' chief executive) ruled that while the bat was illegal, it didn't violate the "spirit of the rules." He added that the bat was not "altered to improve the distance factor," and that the rules only provided for removal of the bat from the game, not calling the batter out. The reason for the restriction on pine tar on bats is not because the substance gives a batter an unfair advantage, but because contact with baseballs would render the balls unusable, thus requiring more balls to be used in a particular game.

MacPhail ordered the game resumed with two out in the top of the ninth inning with the Royals up 5-4. He also ruled that Brett was to be ejected for his outburst.

The Yankees made one last appeal, but to no avail. On August 18 (a scheduled off day for both teams), the game was resumed from the point of Brett's home run, with about 1,200 fans in attendance. On paper the scoring of the incident reads as follows: a home run for Brett, on the play Brett, Gaylord Perry, Rocky Colavito, and manager Dick Howser were ejected, game suspended with two outs in the top of the ninth.

A still furious Martin symbolically protested the continuation of the game by putting pitcher Ron Guidry in center field and first baseman Don Mattingly at second base. Mattingly, a lefty, became the majors' first southpaw second baseman since Oakland's Gonzalo Marques a decade earlier; no left-hander has played second base or shortstop in a big-league game since (as of 2009).

Before the first pitch to Hal McRae (who followed Brett in the lineup), Martin challenged Brett's home run on the grounds that Brett had not touched all the bases, and maintained that there was no way for the umpires (a different crew than the one who worked July 24) to dispute this. But umpire Davey Phillips was ready for Martin, producing an affidavit signed by the July 24 umpires stating that Brett had indeed touched all the bases. An irate Martin continued to argue with the umpires and was ejected from the game. As he exited the umpires announced that the game was being played under protest by the Yankees. Yankees reliever George Frazier struck McRae out to finally end the top of the ninth, twenty-five days after it had begun. Dan Quisenberry then got New York out 1-2-3 in the bottom of the ninth to preserve the Royals' 5-4 win.

The bat is currently on display in the Baseball Hall of Fame, where it has been since 1987. During a broadcast of Mike & Mike in the Morning, ESPN analyst Tim Kurkjian stated that Brett used the bat for a few games after the incident until being cautioned that the bat would be useless if broken. Brett sold the bat to a collector for $25,000, had second thoughts, repurchased the bat for the same amount from the collector and then donated the bat to the Hall of Fame.

The winning pitcher for the Royals was reliever Mike Armstrong, who went 10-7 that year in 58 appearances, notching career highs in wins and games. In a 2006 interview, Armstrong said an angry Yankees fan threw a brick from an overpass at Kansas City's bus cracking the windshield as the Royals were leaving for the airport after the make up game."It was wild to go back to New York and play these four outs in a totally empty stadium" Armstrong said. "I'm dressed in the uniform, and nobody's there".

-- Posted by greer958 on Wed, May 13, 2009, at 5:44 PM

The game was pure when the media wasn't allowed in the locker room or the dugout. Baseball is a game of cheats and pushing the envelope to win: stealing signs, vaseline, pine tar, emery boards, corked bats, amphetimines, nicotine...where do you draw the line?

The fact is, MLB turned their heads when the game needed it. Now, make some rules and abide by them, which they are apparently trying to do.

Players like Sosa, Bonds, McGwire, Clemens, etc., belong in the Hall of Fame b/c they played their career in a time when the game, owners and the players' union tolerated steroid use. So get off your high horse.

-- Posted by layne staley on Thu, May 21, 2009, at 10:16 PM

Well put Layne, I tend to agree with you.

-- Posted by BonScott on Fri, May 22, 2009, at 1:01 AM


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Bobby is currently the Assistant Publisher at the Daily Statesman after serving his term as Managing Editor. He wears many hats in the office, including coordinator of all things online, but his real passion is sports. He can and will talk to anyone about any kind of sport or sports memorabilia collection. Just ask him a question!
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