Roger Clemens got off easy
Even as a life-long San Francisco Giants fan, it certainly seemed to
me that one of the best arguments out there that Bonds had definitely
used steroids was that he was actually more productive in his late 30s
and early 40s than he had been in his mid-20s. Naturally, when the
BALCO case exploded, this clinched it for most of the public. Bonds
had used steroids, period.
As a result, the cacophony of boos, chants, taunts, signs, etc., etc.,
that Bonds faced during every road game as he chased Aaron's record
was almost unreal. I'm still impressed that he managed to break the
record under such difficult circumstances.
But what always bothered me during Bonds' home run chase was how hard
people went after him, especially when he had never tested positive
for steroids and wasn't yet on his way to a federal perjury trial. He
was killed in the court of public opinion before technically being
guilty, just like McGwire and Sosa. Meanwhile, Clemens, who also fit
the steroids M.O. to a T, basically got off scot-free.
Of course, people will say the rage directed at Bonds was primarily
due to the fact that he was connected to BALCO, while Clemens was not.
There's certainly some truth to that. It also helped that Bonds was
chasing baseball's defining record, while Clemens was not.
But for Clemens, the same signs were there for the court of public
opinion to judge. It wasn't quite at the BALCO level, but it sure was
close.
Clemens was incredibly productive late in his career. He beefed up
substantially after Dan Duquette said Clemens was "past his prime." He
went nuts and threw a bat at Mike Piazza. Baseball writers openly
speculated if Clemens had used steroids. And perhaps most damning of
all, former pitcher Jason Grimsley in late 2006 named Clemens as a
player who used performance enhancing drugs.
When you line up both Bonds and Clemens, according to the strict
letter of the law, neither had ever tested positive for anything at
the time these separate instances broke - BALCO and Grimsley's
admission.
Yet everyone began bashing Bonds incessantly after BALCO, while no one
really jumped on Clemens after multiple signs that he too was a user.
The reasons why Bonds got the raw end of the deal are of course
limitless. It has to do with the home run record, it has to do with
race, it has to do with the mistaken belief that steroids wouldn't
really be beneficial for picthers to use, it has to do with the media,
it has to do with the fact that Bonds is a bigger jerk than Clemens
(barely), etc.
Now, the public has essentially the same proof on Clemens that they
used to bash Bonds with. Again, for neither man is there proof of a
positive test, but documents that say Clemens got steroid shots in the
butt should be viewed on the same level as BALCO.
But for Clemens, he isn't going to have to deal with people coming
after him, because he's probably never going to play again.
He should have gotten killed in the court of public opinion just as
hard as Bonds did. But for whatever reasons, he didn't.
He got off easy.
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