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-   -   Who on the redsox will be on the list? (http://www.striped-bass.com/Stripertalk/showthread.php?t=45529)

EarnedStripes44 12-14-2007 09:43 AM

Lo Duca was named

EarnedStripes44 12-14-2007 09:44 AM

"...16 Yankees, past and present, were identified..."

Rockfish9 12-14-2007 09:45 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by The Dad Fisherman (Post 547137)
I don't know, that would mean he would be a part of a "Control" group, and from what I saw he didn't exhibit much of that

LMAO.. your right about that.... not even self control!

stripersnipr 12-14-2007 06:06 PM

Yankees*. "Somebody needs to take those cheaters out" :jester:

Raider Ronnie 12-14-2007 07:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rockfish9 (Post 547133)
I'm with Slip, I'm tired of hearing about cheating, what ever happend to playing for the love of the game....

Gagne must have got a placebo before he came here....



It's played for the love of money $$$

boot man 12-15-2007 06:57 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Strike_King (Post 547311)
IMHO,this all falls squarely on the shoulders of commish Bud Selig. IMO, Selig has been an unmitigated disaster. For one thing, if it wasn't for his bumbling, the Mitchell Report probably would not have been necessary.Selig presided over the only cancelled World Series. He turned a blind eye to juicing for years, because juiced players made money for the owners, of which he was one. Every recommendation made by the Mitchell Report should have been implemented years ago. That's what a Commissioner who was protecting the integrity of the game would have done. Selig did not because he's never really been the Commissioner of Baseball.

I respectfully disagree. This steroid/drug culture has permeated MLB for many years, most likely predating Selig's Brewers ownership. Where were Euberoth(sp?), Kuhn, Giamatti, Vincent, etc? It's my opinion that the fault lies with Donald Fehr and the players association. Remember the strikes and lockouts? If they had agreed to adequate drug testing years ago, the problem would not have grown.

Don't get me wrong, Selig has made mistakes (many actually). But at least he's addressing it.

Oh well, I will still be a basball fan, probably for life.

striperondafly 12-15-2007 07:56 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Strike_King (Post 547069)
I was hoping the biggest casualty would be Selig...And good luck getting the player's union to allow any testing..

the players union should take alot of this blame - jackarses! :gorez:

Mike P 12-15-2007 10:52 AM

Steroids have been around baseball for at least 30 years, maybe even longer.

Remember when Freddy Lynn showed up at spring training sporting about 15 pounds of added muscle and ripped forearms, and attributed it to "Nautilis machines"?

All those "bash brothers" on the 80s A's with those tight pants showing ripped quads?

George Brett going from a Boggs-type singles hitter to a slugger, and the way his eyes were bulging out of his skull as he threw a fit over the pine tar incident?

I even heard a couple of talking heads speculating that steroids were the reason that Nolan Ryan could throw no-hitters in his mid-40s.

Certainly, in the last 20 years, we've seen players perform at unprecedented levels into sports' version of their geriatric years.

And I would be willing to bet that the problem is 100 times worse in the NFL. Take a look at the playing weights of the guys in Canton, who played in the 60s and 70s, and compare them to linemen's weights today. Do you realize that John Hannah only weighed 265 pounds? Mike Webster weighed less than 250. Today there probably isn't a starting lineman in the entire NFL who weighs less than 300 lbs. You have guys like Ogden and Pace who weigh in closer to 400 lbs than 300 :doh: Most division 1-A college teams have offensive lines that average over 300 lbs. Are we to believe that this huge disparity in the space of one generation is the result of mama's home cookin' and better training regimens? :hs:

ProfessorM 12-15-2007 03:35 PM

When money is involved cheating will happen, sports, business, taxes, you name it it happens. I am not surprised by any of it. Hell it has been a staple of the Olympics for decades. Remember the East German women athletes
that needed shaves. The Olympics and Tour De France have some to the strictest testing around and they still do it.

Mike P 12-15-2007 05:13 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mike P (Post 547377)
I even heard a couple of talking heads speculating that steroids were the reason that Nolan Ryan could throw no-hitters in his mid-40s.

I also found this little blurb poking around the internet--it does make you wonder:

"In spite of his focus on physical fitness, Ryan suffered a heart attack on April 25, 2000, and had to receive a double coronary bypass"

Mike P 12-15-2007 09:53 PM

Tom House May 2005
Admitted Using: Steroids (Non-specific)
What he said: In a telephone interview with San Fransisco Chronicle reporter, Ron Kroichick, House admitted to using steroids 'for a couple of seasons' during his career (1971-1978). House estimated that six or seven pitchers on every staff in baseball were experimenting with steroids in the 1970's. This was, and still is, the earliest account of steroid use in baseball. House's admission and comments are from a May 3, 2005 San Fransisco Chronicle article entitled House a 'failed experiment' with steroids.

boot man 12-16-2007 10:04 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mike P (Post 547469)
Tom House May 2005
Admitted Using: Steroids (Non-specific)
What he said: In a telephone interview with San Fransisco Chronicle reporter, Ron Kroichick, House admitted to using steroids 'for a couple of seasons' during his career (1971-1978). House estimated that six or seven pitchers on every staff in baseball were experimenting with steroids in the 1970's. This was, and still is, the earliest account of steroid use in baseball. House's admission and comments are from a May 3, 2005 San Fransisco Chronicle article entitled House a 'failed experiment' with steroids.

I wonder if the juice helped him catch Aaron's 715th HR.


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