Barry Bonds on the roaster again...

spacekowboy

Edgar Allan Bro
Joined
May 17, 2001
Posts
49,018
Thank god...

Faced with the most damning, deeply sourced, comprehensive and chilling charges against Barry Bonds yet, courtesy of a new book by the San Francisco Chronicle reporters who have been on him from the start, decision day is here for Bonds, for baseball and for the San Francisco Giants.

In the crushing new investigative book "Game of Shadows" (an excerpt appears in the March 13 issue of Sports Illustrated), authors Mark Fainaru-Wada and Lance Williams use extensive interviews, grand jury testimony, secret documents and mountains of evidence to show in painstaking detail, not just that Bonds used performance-enhancing drugs to become the most fearsome slugger of all time, but how, when and what he used on a day-in, day-out basis.

BALCO Barry may never stand trial in a court of law, but right here, right now, on the eve of the historic season that could see him become the all-time home run king, the court of public opinion is in its closing arguments and he is way, way behind.

The book should either forever cement Bonds' legacy as that of a cheat of the highest order or allow the ballplayer to sue the books' publisher so ferociously for libel that he'll own half of San Francisco.

There isn't any middle ground. There isn't any room for debate or for situational ethics. There isn't any more time to put off making serious decisions about Bonds' future.

If Barry's reaction is to ignore, to pout, to try to clown it up in a pathetic, public relations-fueled drag act – his hair and boobs as fake as his career stats – then no longer can anyone sit by and idly watch.

That would start with the Giants, Bonds' employer and enabler which has profited even more handsomely than the slugger himself at this fraud show, this freak act. The Giants don't have the contractual right to cut Bonds loose, but that doesn't prevent them from finally doing what's right.

If Bonds isn't defending himself in a serious manner, then the Giants should bench him forever. Yeah, sit him and let the old drug cheat waste away, never getting a chance to take a final shot at Babe Ruth and Henry Aaron, never again letting the village idiot Giants fans applaud him as some hero.

Anything else is a slap in the face of baseball, of history, of San Francisco, of Aaron, of consumers who demand real athletes and not a chemical creation who hits every third pitch into the San Francisco Bay.

It's not like Bonds is owed anything. The juice made him rich and infamous. No one is asking back the money, no one is going to send him off to prison. There will always be ever-apologetic ESPN willing to cleanse his image with some silly reality show.

But for the Giants to keep pretending and keep profiting is just as despicable as Bonds, as the book alleges, popping 20 pills a day and shooting himself up with drugs.

Understand that Bonds is no one's victim, no one's good guy. Don't let the Paula Abdul act that got all the clowns on the 11 o'clock news chortling fool you.

This is someone who sat next to his own godfather – the classy, beloved Willie Mays – on the day he tied the Giants' all-time greatest player on the home run list and acted like they were equals. He knowingly smiled and let Willie make a fool of himself by defending BALCO Barry and providing political cover.

It takes a special kind of person to do that to his own godfather.

It takes a special kind of person to keep doing this to everyone.

The early excerpts from "Game of Shadows," set for release March 27, are stunning. It is not that the book reveals that Bonds used performance-enhancing drugs to become the most incredible home run hitter of all time. Only the most naive among us didn't already know that, Giants officials included.

It is the details that are too deep and precise for Bonds to ignore. It is also the revelation that Bonds, in 1998, watched the circus performances of Mark McGwire, Sammy Sosa and all the other highly suspicious stars of the steroid era and felt the need to keep up. So he turned to drugs.

Which is why "Game of Shadows" shouldn't just put the final nail in Bonds' coffin. It should convince Hall of Fame voters to turn a cold, callous shoulder on the entire era, keeping all of these puffed-out sluggers out of Cooperstown forever.

It should motivate Bud Selig to wipe the record book clean of that time frame, even reinstating Roger Maris' 61 home runs as the single-season record. Because baseball relies on having its lore passed down through the generations, and there is no way you'll ever be able to explain all of this to your children or your grandchildren.

But mostly this should make life perfectly miserable for BALCO Barry, who should be treated with scorn by anyone who cares about the game.

Presumably that starts with the Giants' organization itself, which if it has any courage, any ethics, any sense of right and wrong, would shut this charade down forever and stop stealing money off this sad, sad excuse of an athlete.


Dan Wetzel is Yahoo! Sports' national columnist. Dan is the author of two new books.
 
Hmm, strangely enough, now I want to buy the book, even though I don't give a fuck about baseball. Wait a minute, its not possible that the whole "news article" was a marketing-driven piece, is it? Naw....
 
islandman said:
Makes his dressing up as Paula Abdul even funnier now.


I knew something was up when I saw that. He doesn't do shit like that unless he's trying to defuse something. he knew this book was about to be published , and that was his way of saying " Look , I'm really a good guy see?"
 
I prefer Kenny Roger's Roasters, now there's good chicken and great green beans.


As far as Barry Bond goes, his goose is cooked in the court of public opinion.
 
Bonds is pissed off right now cause Giambi won't tell him what he started taking about June of last year.
 
Lasher said:
Bonds is pissed off right now cause Giambi won't tell him what he started taking about June of last year.

Thing is they are talking about banning him from the Hall.

I read the article, then looked as his status up till 98... didnt it seem like he was a first ballot, even back then, before he allegedly did the big needle?
 
Radiohead said:
Thing is they are talking about banning him from the Hall.

I read the article, then looked as his status up till 98... didnt it seem like he was a first ballot, even back then, before he allegedly did the big needle?

Yeah. Gold glover, won a few MVPs. Weird.
 
Lasher said:
Bonds is pissed off right now cause Giambi won't tell him what he started taking about June of last year.
Don't you think he's more pissed that Jose Canseco is suddenly looking like an altar boy who told the truth all along?
 
Radiohead said:
Thing is they are talking about banning him from the Hall.

I read the article, then looked as his status up till 98... didnt it seem like he was a first ballot, even back then, before he allegedly did the big needle?
Nope.
 
spacekowboy420 said:
I knew something was up when I saw that. He doesn't do shit like that unless he's trying to defuse something. he knew this book was about to be published , and that was his way of saying " Look , I'm really a good guy see?"
I was thinking that the second they showed the clip. The only other possibility that crossed my mind is that it was a stunt for the reality tv show he's in.

Bonds is a pariah even amongst his teammates and he could care less what the public thinks of him but taking away his records and his entry into the HOF would, I believe, kill him inside.
 
Agent99 said:
Don't you think he's more pissed that Jose Canseco is suddenly looking like an altar boy who told the truth all along?

Right now I'd vote for Canseco for the HoF before Bonds, McGwire or Sosa.
 
Agent99 said:
Don't you think he's more pissed that Jose Canseco is suddenly looking like an altar boy who told the truth all along?


That's actually pissing me off a little bit . I can't possibly think of him as a good guy. Then again he did show some balls. Which most roid heads no longer have.
 
Lasher said:
Right now I'd vote for Canseco for the HoF before Bonds, McGwire or Sosa.

I tend to agree, and I was McGwire's biggest fan when he was in STL. He was juiced, right along with Sosa and Bonds. They should be kicked out, every mother's son of them.
 
Gringao said:
I tend to agree, and I was McGwire's biggest fan when he was in STL. He was juiced, right along with Sosa and Bonds. They should be kicked out, every mother's son of them.

I gave McGwire the benefit of the doubt for a long time. He did hit 49 as a relatively small rookie.

But I think its obvious that every HR record from '94 to probably '04 is invalid.
 
Lasher said:
I gave McGwire the benefit of the doubt for a long time. He did hit 49 as a relatively small rookie.

But I think its obvious that every HR record from '94 to probably '04 is invalid.

I can't argue with that, as much as I'd like to. Do you think Griffey was in on it, too?
 
Gringao said:
I tend to agree, and I was McGwire's biggest fan when he was in STL. He was juiced, right along with Sosa and Bonds. They should be kicked out, every mother's son of them.

I hate to say it , but I agree. I loved the McGwire and Sosa HR race back in 98. They saved baseball for me after the strike, to tell the truth. I got sucked into the drama. Now all of them need to be out on their ear. And so does Bud Selig for that matter for allowing it to happen in the first place.
 
Lasher said:
I gave McGwire the benefit of the doubt for a long time. He did hit 49 as a relatively small rookie.

But I think its obvious that every HR record from '94 to probably '04 is invalid.

You didnt really answer my question... the book says he didnt juice until 98 on, and even if that is true... if he retired in 98 instead, does he walk through the front doors of cooperstown?

PS They talk about the big needle than Ben Johnson took when he set the world record for the 100 in 88... took 12 years to equal (assuming the the Mac +/or Bonds Juiced... 70 and some is due in 2010 or so anyway)
 
spacekowboy420 said:
I hate to say it , but I agree. I loved the McGwire and Sosa HR race back in 98. They saved baseball for me after the strike, to tell the truth. I got sucked into the drama. Now all of them need to be out on their ear. And so does Bud Selig for that matter for allowing it to happen in the first place.

Yep. And Bonds needs to be chained to something before he destroys Tokyo.
 
Although the whole "boot McGwire, Sosa and Bonds" argument raises some interesting questions about Gaylord Perry, doesn't it?
 
Gringao said:
I can't argue with that, as much as I'd like to. Do you think Griffey was in on it, too?

I don't know who to trust anymore.

Some people are obvious. You know Brady Anderson had to be doing something the year he hit 50.

A guy like Griffey, who had just unbelievable talent. I don't think it's a stretch for him to hit 50+ with the smaller ballparks and watered down pitching. I think if he had gone the route of the Big 3 he would've outhit them all.
 
Gringao said:
Yep. And Bonds needs to be chained to something before he destroys Tokyo.


:D he looks like a Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade float.
 
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Radiohead said:
You didnt really answer my question... the book says he didnt juice until 98 on, and even if that is true... if he retired in 98 instead, does he walk through the front doors of cooperstown?

If he blows out his knee in '97 and never plays another game, he
was a lock then.
 
Lasher said:
I don't know who to trust anymore.

Some people are obvious. You know Brady Anderson had to be doing something the year he hit 50.

A guy like Griffey, who had just unbelievable talent. I don't think it's a stretch for him to hit 50+ with the smaller ballparks and watered down pitching. I think if he had gone the route of the Big 3 he would've outhit them all.

I agree. Griffey doesn't have the 'roid look that Bonds, Sosa et al, are sporting. I think he's clean, and a damn good ball player.
 
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