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HOF -> Bonds & clemens
Interesting article on the hof
https://www.google.com/amp/deadspin....1790600514/amp If you had a vote, would u vote bonds and or clemens into the hof? |
I voted yes for both. Clemens is my second all time favorite player so I am very biased. Barry was such a super star that they would cut from the game on TV to show his at bats when he was putting up video game #'s.
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Both were at the absolute top of their games well before they likely started juicing. Yes.
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I tried one time to figure out when Bonds started, and found an interesting uptick after a fairly normal string of years. Did a bit of figuring and came to the conclusion that he'd have had the career HR record 2-3 years after he actually got it if he'd stayed straight. If he'd been a bit nicer, he might even have stuck around that long. One very odd thing was the year after the strike Topps did some computer simulation to extend the stats for an insert. They had Bonds with 70+ and that was probably pre juice. Clemens I thought had found a novel career end formula. I actually liked the part where he'd play for his hometown team, but only from partway through the year and only home games. I think that was an interesting late career option. From the teams side, who wouldn't want a proven performer for only a few months and heading into the postseason fairly fresh instead of worn down by the long season? I think eventually they'll be in, and we'll always have the debate about how to compare their eras to before and after. Steve B |
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I voted NO for both, even though they WERE 'at the absolute top...' 'well before they likely started juicing.' Making a decision like this is a slippery slop regardless of which way you vote. I have always thought that the actual Hall-of-Famers should have votes. Truly, they would be the best judges on who should be in and who should not be in. Pete Rose WAS a lock...Rafael Palmeiro WAS a sure thing - where do you draw the line? The rules that are in place are for everyone, not just the desperate border-line Major Leaguers searching for some way, any way, to stick around. My opinion has not changed over the last 18 years...since the 'Home Run Race' and I admit I got into that! I bet a lot of folks willing to vote for Clemens and Bonds are not willing to admit their own hypocrisy during that same time period. Again, a very slippery slop. I believe that Joe Jackson was guilty, though he may not have been sure of what had been asked of him. Still guilty...we're all grown-ups here. I never really though Piazza or Bagwell were juicing - they did not have sudden spikes in their numbers, but rather, were very steady throughout their careers until age or injury lowered their production. I think the same about Jim Thome and, especially Jr. Griffey. IMHO Their 600+ Home Runs are 100% legit. As was Greg Maddux's 355 Wins and Nolan Ryan's 5,714 Strikeouts. Being in the Hall of Fame is an honor not a right. It's bad enough, we can't look at the All-Time Lists the same anymore...those responsible should not be rewarded for that. McGwire lied to Mrs. Maris's face and a great man like Hank Aaron deserves better than to be thought of as second to a spoiled and arrogant jerk who stood on the shoulders of greater men who are not mentioned nearly as often as he. |
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Oh, and thinking these guys were HOFers before using is pure speculation. Nobody knows when they started using, period. And nobody knows what they would've done had they not used. The idea that Topps or anyone thinks they can extrapolate the stats is ridiculous. Look at Don Mattingly, sure fire future HOFer until his back gave out, then he stuck around and had subpar seasons (by his standards, many players would've killed for a down Mattingly year) and now his HOF chances are non-existent. Nothing saying the same wouldn't have happened to Bonds, Clemens, McGwire, Manny, etc. We don't know, we'll never know, and the players that cheated are to blame for that. No to both, I hope they never even get close. |
Why was it ok to use amphetamines?
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Also Raymond if there was a way to prove it I would bet everything I own your list of clean players has more than 1 steroid user on it. |
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Steroids let you instantly recover from insane workouts. Amphetamines let you do insane workouts without getting tired. Now stack the 2 so you can do insane workouts without getting tired and recovery instantly and you have a winning combination.:) |
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Each generation has done what it can to gain an edge, and used what was then available. If anabolics were readily available to the Mantle and Mays generation, I have little doubt many of that generation would have used. I think it's fantasy to pretend those guys somehow were morally superior.
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I will also add this. Steroids are known to cause serious health problems. Especially in youngsters. Anphetamin doesn't unless they are abused. Those players who used steroids caused a lot of kids who looked up to them to harm themselves. To me that is far worse than the cheating. |
As long as there is competition the competitors will look for an edge. This includes PED's, greenies, sand paper, etc.
If a player cheats only once that player is still a cheater. That said how many cheaters are already in the HOF? Just sayin |
The best explanation I ever herd went something like this: Amphetamines were taken with the intent of being able to perform the way you normally would. Steroids were taken with the intent of performing better than you ever could.
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The way steroids was explained to me by an ex weightlifter/wrestler (Who claimed to be clean ) Was very close to that. He said that they made the recovery quick enough that you could work out pretty hard every day instead of needing light days or days off, essentially doubling or tripling your training time. Steve B |
So {ALL} HOFers that didn"t play vrs blacks,how great can there stat"s be?They were great only vrs {WHITE} players!So let's throw there stats out ,to!Then there is not many HOFers left! I do not think Jim Thome or Griffey used,if Griffey did, it just didn"t work for all the years he missed,did it!Robert.
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Again, in my mind the arguement isn't amphetamines versus steroids, or the spitball or whatever form of cheating comes up. My arguement is that whether or not people already inducted cheated, why exacerbate the problem by admitting more cheaters? Nobody ever claimed Mantle, Mays, etc were cheaters prior to their election. That came up years later. So if we'd like to address that problem, then we need to discuss baseball deciding to get in the business of stripping awards and achievements, a la the Olympic committee. Since that is never going to happen, the issue really is do we continue to elect cheaters even with the benefit of hindsight.
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I think both should get in.
Heres a letter i wrote a while back to the hof http://metsmerizedonline.com/2014/01...-of-fame.html/ |
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I know if I had my future and my reputation linked to the 'extras' I knowingly took, I would also use some of my Big Money on the very best masking agents available. But, if you gain forty pounds of fat-free muscle after the age of 35, something's definitely not right. Another important point - which shouldn't matter, but does - Hall of Fame elections are also popularity contests....and we are talking about two of the all-time biggest jerks. There will be no biographies of these guys long after they're dead saying that they were, in fact, not that bad. These were two arrogant bastards who feel they are better than the Game. How many times does that lesson have to be learned? . |
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The "greenies" argument falls apart under cursory statistical analysis. IN THE HISTORY OF BASEBALL, not one single player had a second career peak after age 32. Between 1994 and 2006 something like 28 players had second career peaks after age 32. (not to mention all the players who were able to stay in MLB because of PED's where otherwise they'd have been out of the game)
That era is reflected in the power surges, the statistical anomalies and the eye test that it was bad for the game and unnatural. I think Bonds and Clemens are in because they were already HOF'ers even if they retired before their 2nd peak. The rest???? well, I'd say no. Most of em wouldn't have reached their levels of performance without them. as far as the tired Pete Rose argument is concerned, he gambled on games, he lied about it, and has consistently shifted the truth until it was financially fortuitous for him to half ass tell it. (new books) Not to mention HE AGREED to his punishment. (and he's probably one of the top 3 or 4 most overrated players of all time due to his lack of power, late career collapse and mediocre glove) |
I see it very simply, voters didnt want to vote for "them" cause they cheated...
cheating is cheating. Roids, greenies, scuffing balls, corking bats, etc Who was the best of each era? Hof is a museum of the history of the best players in each era. Wasnt bonds one of the best in his? Did he do roids? Yes. Did piazza? As a huge met fan, I dont know, maybe. |
Rose ,overrated ?
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Also, if anyone thinks that steroids were non-existent in major sports in the 70s when the East Germans had a systematic doping program in place since 73' is delusional to me. The money and importance of performance was enough to have had players experiment, esp after the 76 Olympics. Lyle Alzado was open about taking them his entire career starting in college in 1969'. If a college kid could find them, a Pro sure as heck could. Yes, not saying they did, but The Mick, Clemente and even Aaron all had ample opportunity. Hell, Pud Galvin is the first admitted anabolic juicer in 1889! |
I think neither should be, but I will add this. The enhancement received by Bonds was staggering compared to Clemens. Bonds's head looked like a pumpkin in his steroid years, and his body was twice the size when he was younger. When Clemens was 20 yrs old, he was leaner and struck out 20 in a game. Both have question marks, but Bonds is a much larger issue IMO compared to what his career would have been without the huge help....
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As an aside, Barry Bonds surely is the greatest player in history who never acquired a nickname (other than a few late career sarcastic ones).
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Probably because nicknames tend to be endearing terms and Bonds was never thought of with much regard. Wouldn't surprise me to hear a story of a teammate trying and Bonds being a humorless dick about it.
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Bonds was a HOF even prior to PED use
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Neither - Never.
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I'd put them both in in a heartbeat. I'd also make sure the plaque notates the era and why this was such a hot debate for such a long time.
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I voted yes to Clemens . I don't think they had enough against him. Just Brian
Aka some crazy guy who kept old used syringes in a coke can in his basement For years . You can take his word I choose not to . Bonds for most of us is the greatest baseball player we will ever see or seen . But yes he cheated . Greenie 100% helped enhance a players performance. Even a placebo has positive effects. The Peds that a lot of the players use also were not illegal at the time of use so I don't see the point in that. As whole picture what is the hall of fame with out the all time hit king , homerun leader , cy young leader ? It's a joke and in turn makes all of the honors held in the wall that much less meaningful . |
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there is a rule because people threw a world series, end of story. their reasons for it are unimportant Pete Rose is overrated, I'm sorry. He took 2804 more plate appearances to garner 67 more hits. His career wRC+ (weighted runs created the most accurate hitting stat we have as it weighs the type of hits and is adjusted for park and league, with an average score being 100) of 121 is not even good enough for the top 300 all time (whereas Ty Cobb's 165 is good enough for 8th all time so clearly Cobb is not overrated) Rose not only gambled and lied, he kept lying and used it to his advantage to magically come clean when it was profitable for him to do so. He's a scumbag. He's a HOF player but not "inner circle" and I think the best thing to do is wait for him to die then let him in. P.S. fielding percentage? really? that's like the most worthless statistic in the world because it doesn't account for range. a statue with inability to move could have a 1.000 fielding % if it never made an error, but it would be a far worse fielder than a player who created more outs but made a few errors along the way. |
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I was thinking more along the lines of Adam Dunn, but your's works too! That's the thing with fielding % it really doesn't tell us much about how good a defender a player is. Let us compare 2 SS's from 2016 : Player A had a fielding % of .991 Player B had a fielding % of .982 if that's all we looked at one would say player A was the better defender, BUT! Player A had 180 put outs and 389 assists (along with 86 double plays) in 1163 innings with 5 errors with 3 defensive runs saved and an ultimate zone rating per 150 games of 11.4 Player B had 198 put outs,337 assists and 76 double plays in 1045 innings with 10 errors with 18 defensive runs saved and a UZR/150 of 25.1 so, upon a deeper dive into the numbers we see that Player B had a far better defensive year than Player A with 15 more DRS in 118 less innings. (Player A is Jose iglesias, Player B is Andrelton Simmons) remember UZR and DRS account for positioning at the start of the play, range covered and the % chance that play is made (they are put in tranches based on %) For an even more eye opening expose' of the mediocrity of fielding %, career SS rating since 1871 have Troy Tulowitski #1 with a career fielding % of .985 Ozzie Smith is 14th with a .978 (behind Cal Ripken! lol) |
I don't know if anyone has posted the link to this particular article, but it makes for some interesting, then humorous reading.
http://www.espn.com/blog/sweetspot/p...-each-mlb-team . |
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Thanx for the link! Good article! (and i agree with most of their picks think Jack Morris ends up coming up short as his regular season results are kinda mediocre for a HOF pitcher. I tend to think his performance in 2 or 3 playoff games, while epic, are not enough to cover up a long career of slightly above avg performance) |
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