http://www.latimes.com/sports/la-sp-manny-ramirez8-2009may08,0,6324894.story (http://www.latimes.com/sports/la-sp-manny-ramirez8-2009may08,0,6324894.story)
Wow. Sucks for the Dodgers who are off to a great start. Good thing they didn't do a long term contract with him.
I think that 99% of baseball players who put up hall of fame type numbers cheated.
This pitcher who started out 6-0 with a .4 era after bouncing back from a bout with depression? Fast ball went from 89 to 94. happy pills don't do that for you.
I'm convinced of two people's innocence. Greg maddux, think this one is obvious. And Frank Thomas, who had a naturally huge football player type body at 16, was an advocate for tougher testing, and had a career that followed a natural pattern of regression.
except that pitcher could always throw 94-96. he did it in high school, did it in the minors, did it in the bullpen. he just couldn't do it when his head was in the wrong place. some sort of mental block.
Are the Red Sox going to forfeit their titles? ;)
Quote from: dwaderoy2004 on May 07, 2009, 11:13:03 AMexcept that pitcher could always throw 94-96. he did it in high school, did it in the minors, did it in the bullpen. he just couldn't do it when his head was in the wrong place. some sort of mental block.
Yeah you should really read the article in SI. Great article. Clearly the problem with him when that was going on was mental. When you aren't mentally there you don't play as well as you can/should. I'd be shocked if he used steroids. I'd also be shocked if Griffey used steroids.
Couldn't be happier to see Manny's suspension. I can't stand that guy.
As for mental blocks, anyone remember Mark Wohlers of the Atlanta Braves about ten years ago? The poor guy went from throwing 100 mph pitches in relief to not being able to get the ball anywhere near the plate. I specifically remember watching one game when Bobby Cox put him in just so he could build some sort of self-confidence, but it failed miserably as the guy threw wild pitch after wild pitch.
NY Times article about mental blocks for pitchers: http://www.nytimes.com/1998/08/23/sports/wildly-out-of-control-is-it-pitcher-s-motion-or-emotion.html
Quote from: Robyrd5 on May 07, 2009, 12:21:25 PM
Couldn't be happier to see Manny's suspension. I can't stand that guy.
As for mental blocks, anyone remember Mark Wohlers of the Atlanta Braves about ten years ago? The poor guy went from throwing 100 mph pitches in relief to not being able to get the ball anywhere near the plate. I specifically remember watching one game when Bobby Cox put him in just so he could build some sort of self-confidence, but it failed miserably as the guy threw wild pitch after wild pitch.
NY Times article about mental blocks for pitchers: http://www.nytimes.com/1998/08/23/sports/wildly-out-of-control-is-it-pitcher-s-motion-or-emotion.html
2B Chuck Knoblauch couldn't throw to first if his life depended on it.
Not steroids but rather dick drugs.
http://sports.yahoo.com/mlb/news?slug=ys-ramirezsuspension050709&prov=yhoo&type=lgns (http://sports.yahoo.com/mlb/news?slug=ys-ramirezsuspension050709&prov=yhoo&type=lgns)
Wow. Stupid, but not "cheating" per se... at least, not on the baseball diamond :o
I'd imagine the Dodgers are less than delighted.
Quote from: dsfire on May 07, 2009, 01:21:47 PM
Wow. Stupid, but not "cheating" per se... at least, not on the baseball diamond :o
I'd imagine the Dodgers are less than delighted.
the owner's daughter doesn't mind ;)
Just Manny being Manny
He took a women's fertility drug..... hGC. It is taken after completing a steroid cycle to deal with testosterone levels. Not a dick drug.
Quote from: SaintPaulWarrior on May 07, 2009, 01:49:32 PM
He took a women's fertility drug..... hGC. It is taken after completing a steroid cycle to deal with testosterone levels. Not a dick drug.
just read that now too. controls testosterone.
How soon before Albert Pujols is outed? He's the most obvious case since McGwire. He went from a nobody...a lightly regarded prospect...in A ball to the major leagues where he hit .330 with 37 HRS and 130 RBI. Out of nowhere!
Quote from: PuertoRicanNightmare on May 07, 2009, 02:24:19 PM
How soon before Albert Pujols is outed? He's the most obvious case since McGwire. He went from a nobody...a lightly regarded prospect...in A ball to the major leagues where he hit .330 with 37 HRS and 130 RBI. Out of nowhere!
I've wondered about this one, too.
How about a fun (maybe) and meaningless (certainly) parlor game for everyone. Two questions. If you had to bet your house, who would you bet has taken steroids, and who has not? I'll limit it to current players just for the heck of it, but answer whoever you want. Obviously, this is nothing more than idle speculation.
Who do I think has used? Travis Hafner.
Who hasn't? This is the much more difficult question, I think...Lincecum? Although I'm not sure I'd bet the house on anyone.
Good topic. If I was betting my house, here's the guys I would pick...
Who used? That's easy, David Ortiz.
Who's clean? I'll go with the soft-tossing lefty, Jaime Moyer.
Quote from: PuertoRicanNightmare on May 07, 2009, 02:24:19 PM
How soon before Albert Pujols is outed? He's the most obvious case since McGwire. He went from a nobody...a lightly regarded prospect...in A ball to the major leagues where he hit .330 with 37 HRS and 130 RBI. Out of nowhere!
The most obvious case since McGwire? Man, I thought your stupid hyperbole was limited to Marquette basketball but I guess not. Pujols came over to the US after his sophomore year of hs and was named all state both years, but chose to stay close to home and attended a lightly-regarded community college not far from St. Louis. A lot of scouts were worried that he didn't have a real good physique and also thought he didn't play any position particularly well (and he didn't really until he settled in at first). After being drafted by the Cards in the 13th round during the 1999 draft Pujols progressed through the minors in a year and a half and won the ROY in 2001. The guy can flat out rake and has done so at every level he has every played. He has consistently had a good batting average and on base percentage and hits line drives all over the yard. He hasn't seen a spike in his power similar to guys like Bonds, Sosa, Caminitti..etc or his appearance, two telltale signs that a guy has been juicing.
Of course, I wouldn't be surprised by anthing anymore; I definitely wouldn't have suspected ManRam.
Definitely using: Kerry Wood - 2000-2003
Definitely not using: Kerry Wood - after 2003
It's the only way I can explain what's up with that guy's flash of brilliance.
Quote from: Skatastrophy on May 07, 2009, 03:49:57 PM
Definitely using: Kerry Wood - 2000-2003
Definitely not using: Kerry Wood - after 2003
It's the only way I can explain what's up with that guy's flash of brilliance.
And now the Indians ("my" team) are stuck with the post-roids Kerry Woods and the post-roids Travis Hafner. Damn.
Quote from: jmayer1 on May 07, 2009, 03:10:23 PM
The guy can flat out rake and has done so at every level he has every played. He has consistently had a good batting average and on base percentage and hits line drives all over the yard. He hasn't seen a spike in his power similar to guys like Bonds, Sosa, Caminitti..etc or his appearance, two telltale signs that a guy has been juicing.
Before this year, you could make the same claim about Manny or A-Rod. Most people didn't think those guys were doing 'roids because they were great hitters, who's power numbers never spiked.
The fact is Pujols has put up historic numbers in a time where many players have or are using performance enhancing drugs. So yes, he is a logical candidate to be look at as a steroid user, right or wrong ... That's just the time we live in.
I would be reluctant to defend any MLB player when comes to this stuff. The truth is, no one really knows who's clean and who's not.
Quote from: Skatastrophy on May 07, 2009, 03:49:57 PM
Definitely using: Kerry Wood - 2000-2003
Definitely not using: Kerry Wood - after 2003
It's the only way I can explain what's up with that guy's flash of brilliance.
Are you serious? Typical Brewer ignorance.
1998: May 6th The Most Dominant Pitching Performance in History
1999: Tommy John's Surgery.
2000: 8-7 after the surgery.
2001: 12-6 with a 3.36 ERA, while missing several starts.
2002: 12-11 with a 3.67 ERA, no starts missed. 214 Innings Pitched in 33 Games due to Don Baylor.
2003: 14-11 with a 3.20 ERA.
2004: 8-9. Injured for two months.
2005: Nothing
2006: Next to nothing.
2007: Relief
He was most dominant when he first started. He's been injured or recovering since. There is no abrupt explosion of stats that would indicate juicing, unless you consider steady improvement over four seasons an explosion.
Get your crap right.
Quote from: RJax55 on May 07, 2009, 03:01:43 PM
Good topic. If I was betting my house, here's the guys I would pick...
Who's clean? I'll go with the soft-tossing lefty, Jaime Moyer.
Craig Counsell, Greatest player of the steroid era.
http://www.theonion.com/content/news_briefs/turns_out_craig_counsell
Quote from: RJax55 on May 07, 2009, 03:01:43 PM
Who used? That's easy, David Ortiz.
This wouldn't shock me when you look at his stats, but I believe he's been very outspoken about testing. I think he has a ton of quotes out there about it.
Now, being outspoken is no guarantee, but makes him more of a 50/50 candidate rather than a sure user.
Quote from: RJax55 on May 07, 2009, 04:01:12 PM
Before this year, you could make the same claim about Manny or A-Rod. Most people didn't think those guys were doing 'roids because they were great hitters, who's power numbers never spiked.
The fact is Pujols has put up historic numbers in a time where many players have or are using performance enhancing drugs. So yes, he is a logical candidate to be look at as a steroid user, right or wrong ... That's just the time we live in.
I would be reluctant to defend any MLB player when comes to this stuff. The truth is, no one really knows who's clean and who's not.
I don't disagree. Nearly every player from this era will be looked at with scrutiny, but to say Pujols is "the most obvious case since McGwire" is pretty stupid.
Quote from: 2002mualum on May 07, 2009, 04:19:35 PM
Now, being outspoken is no guarantee, but makes him more of a 50/50 candidate rather than a sure user.
I may be remembering this wrong, but wasn't Sosa pretty outspoken about testing...until Rick Reilly (I think) invited him to submit to voluntary testing in an interview.
Quote from: StillAWarrior on May 07, 2009, 04:23:38 PM
I may be remembering this wrong, but wasn't Sosa pretty outspoken about testing...until Rick Reilly (I think) invited him to submit to voluntary testing in an interview.
Yes he was, then he forgot English, just like every other occasion he wasn't hitting dingers.
Seems like as good of a time as any to restart the Bill Simmons debate: http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/page2/story?page=simmons/090507&sportCat=mlb
Timely. Obviously, he had to have had most of this written before today's events, but he incorporated things pretty seamlessly. Fair warning: he's writing about the Red Sox...but I don't recall seeing any reality TV references.
My Brewer themed of who did: Dante Bichette and Greg Vaughn
Did......Josh Hamilton....he did every other drug on the planet
Did not.....Jim Thome
Quote from: marqptm on May 07, 2009, 04:31:26 PM
Yes he was, then he forgot English, just like every other occasion he wasn't hitting dingers.
Touche.
Ortiz wouldn't be the first guy to get caught in a lie (Palmero).
Like I said, in my mind he goes from a "sure thing" to "maybe/maybe not".
Did: David Ortiz
Did Not: Prince Fielder
did: pedro martinez
didnt: got to go with craig counsell
Did: Ken Caminiti
Did not: Rod Beck
Good SherlockPTM, Caminiti admitted to it.
Did you need Ghostwriter to spell that out for you???
Did: Brian Giles
Did not: Ryan Theriot (but the last couple days got me thinkin...)
Quote from: reinko on May 07, 2009, 07:12:21 PM
Good SherlockPTM, Caminiti admitted to it.
Did you need Ghostwriter to spell that out for you???
Playing it safe.