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Barry BondsFollow

#1 Apr 14 2004 at 2:51 AM Rating: Decent
http://sports.yahoo.com/mlb/recap?gid=240413126

I watched Sportcenter last night and was shown Barry from his start in the majors until today. He started at about 180 pounds and is about 6'2" in the last five years he has gained about 35 pounds of muscle.

I like the excitement caused by the recent homers everwhere situation in baseball. But in retrospect it lessens the game to me to realize that most likely all of these new found Sultans of Swat are cheaters.

I do think Barry, Mark Mcgwire, Jason Giambi, Sammy Sosa etc have used steriods to get to where they are. Yes even without steriods they have more talent for the game then I will ever have but it cheapens the history of America's game to have them dethroning the greats of this sport and I think its time Major League Baseball stepped up to the plate (so to speak ) and instituted drug testing.

To me its ridiculous that there is so much controversy about whether or not Pete Rose belongs in the hall of fame for betting on baseball when there are so many obvious cheaters that are proliferating in what has always been my favorite sport.

Sorry Barry hit 716, 756 or whatever to me you will always be a cheater and unworthy of being considered among the all time greats of this game.
#2 Apr 14 2004 at 8:01 AM Rating: Good
Shut your hole. You have no idea what that man has or hasn't done. The day you begin a work out regimen even remotely similar to his, you can open your ignorant mouth and speculate all you want. Putting on 35 pounds in 5 years is an easy thing to accomplish if you know what your doing. You on the other hand probably watch a lot of Jim Rome on TV and wouldn't understand what 6 hours in a gym can do for you on a regular basis.

Oh, and this should give you a little better perspective on why it's not so out of whack.
#3 Apr 14 2004 at 8:12 AM Rating: Decent
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Quote:
I watched Sportcenter last night and was shown Barry from his start in the majors until today. He started at about 180 pounds and is about 6'2" in the last five years he has gained about 35 pounds of muscle.



That should put him at about 215. I'm 6'2", and when I played hockey three times a week I weighed 215. Knowing how I looked then, and looking at Bonds now, I'd say he's closer to 250. Which would mean he's added about 70lbs of muscle. He's built like a linebacker, and a stout linebacker at that. If anything, I'm probably underestimating his weight.

I agree with you wholeheartedly on this Flish. MLB's drug policies are a joke. I'm curious to see what would happen if it were proven to a reasonable degree of certainty that Bonds et al did buy and use some form of performance enhancing drugs over the years. There's no doubt in my mind that Mark McGwire used steroids. He presented every visible symptom of steroid abuse.

But I don't think MLB will ever do anything serious about the matter. Steroids = more offense = more excitement = more money for all concerned. There's been such an offensive explosion since 1994, that I think its about time they raised the pitcher's mound back to its original height to give pitchers a little more of a chance.



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The day you begin a work out regimen even remotely similar to his, you can open your ignorant mouth and speculate all you want.


Regardless of his work out regimen, nobody ever, in the history of any sport has, at what should be the end of his career, when his numbers are supposed to start dwindling, suddenly produced the greatest offensive explosion by a single player ever. If you don't find that suspicious, I have some nice beachfront land in Arizona you might want to look at.


From the artcile you linked:


The home run record was 24 when Ruth hit 29 in 1919, and then he hit 54 the next year (more than every other team but one) and 59 the next. Steroids didn't even exist then -- there goes Jeff Kent's theory -- yet Ruth more than doubled the record in three years. How was that possible?

Because they went to a better baseball and because Ruth was just about the only player that consistently tried to hit home runs. Prior to Ruth the baseball players had the 'small ball' mentality - make contact, move the runner, and above all DON'T STRIKE OUT. Ruth changed that. Once people saw what Ruth did, others followed in his wake (Foxx, Gehrig, Al Simmons, etc).

Other than 1961, Roger Maris only twice hit as many as 30 home runs in a season, and he never hit as many as 40. So how did he hit 61 in that magical 1961 season?

Short right field, pull hitter in a power packed line up. Why did he never come close before? Because he had only played one season prior to 1961 in Yankee Stadium. Why did he never do it after? Because he was so constantly hounded by the press, and treated so horribly by so many people that he never wanted to do it again.

And while you're answering those questions, kindly explain how Davey Johnson hit five home runs in 1972, and then hit 43 in 1973 but just 31 the remainder of his career. And tell me how Kirby Puckett hit four home runs in his first 1,251 at-bats and then suddenly hit 31 in his third season. And then tell me how Gary Gaetti could hit 21 home runs in 584 at-bats in 1983, then hit just five in 588 at-bats in 1984 and then hit 20 in 560 at-bats in 1985 (and you might as well tell Gary as well, because he has never figured it out himself).

Cause they got lucky? Because sometimes people just have a great season? Because there are such things as wild variations in performance? Hell, one year playing in a men's league I hit .818!! And this was after not having played for ten years, and against some pretty good pitchers (college and minor leaguers included). The next year I hit .488 and then barely managed to hit .250 the year after that.

But none of this can explain why Bonds suddenly got great at the age when most people are looking to finish out thier careers and retire.

Need some more proof that performance levels can vary wildly? Here's another tidbit from your article.

Garth Brooks finished spring training with nearly as high a batting average (.143) as Ken Griffey Jr. (.158).

Edited, Wed Apr 14 09:34:55 2004 by Deathwysh
#4 Apr 14 2004 at 9:00 AM Rating: Decent

A good workout program though could very well get a person in the kind of shape bonds is in, it's rare that someone could put on 75 pounds of muscle but Bonds is a rare guy, although I've yet to see a workout that increases your cranium size... Another thing to take into account is the fact that he is getting up there in age, and as you get older, you fill out, look at MJ in his final years.
Bonds has tremendous hand-eye coordination which allows him to be an insanly accurate hitter, and THAT is why he's the player he is, size does not make that much of a difference when it comes to home run hitting, look at willie mays, hank aaron... not huge guys. The point is that steroids or not, it takes talent to be a great player and Bonds has that talent, and if he is on steroids it's a shame because it WILL tarnish his legacy.

*edit- forgot to delete a line*

Edited, Wed Apr 14 10:30:10 2004 by Mulamen
#5 Apr 14 2004 at 9:03 AM Rating: Good
Oh, and the idea that he just got good in the last 5 years is ludicrous. He won 3 MVPs, 7 gold gloves, hit 374 home runs, 359 doubles, walked over 1200 times and stole 417 bases before 1998. Those are damn near hall of fame numbers right there. That he is getting better is not a suprise to anyone who payed attention to him or his work ethic. I think the guy is a complete d1ck on the personality scale, but to chalk his achievements up to illegal steroid use is ridiculous.
#6 Apr 14 2004 at 10:47 AM Rating: Good
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So Moeb, the fact that BALCO and his personal trainer mailed steroids to Bond's home address doesn't mean diddly here? Your position seems to be that regardless of the surrounding evidence and circumstances he is not a steroid user.

I will openly admit I am not a Barry fan. I think he looks down on the fans who have given him a lucrative career, and is churlish to those who are journalistically tasked to cover his baseball feats.

That, however, does not mean that I think he is not a one-in-a-million athlete. He is a fantastic hitter, has a terrific glove, and has longevity. I believe he would be these things without steroids. I do suspect he succumbed to the temptation of wanting to be the greatest regardless the cost, consequences, and inequity to those other athletes who did not look for a chemical edge.

I believe he has a good work ethic, particularly in regards to his training. Steroid use without the accompanying weight training accomplishes nothing. He is dedicated to being the best hitter in the game and has been to this point.

Yet-- yet --is all that worth the blemish on his records and career? Like Pete Rose, who at the time obviously said "yes," time may make him reconsider his choices. In the moment it may appear to be worth the cost, but years later when his ball playing days are over and the questions persist at every baseball event, every autograph signing, every Cooperstown induction, he may come to the conclusion that he could have done the same thing without the stigma.

And that's what it is, isn't it? Stigma? The very fact we are having this discussion demonstrates that the spot on an otherwise stellar career makes you wonder why he'd take that chance.

I, for one, will not allow hero worship to blind me to what is quite evident: Barry Bonds has used steroids.

Totem
#7 Apr 14 2004 at 11:06 AM Rating: Good
Legal or illegal? Full blown anabolic steroids? Or precursers? What's the argument here?
#8 Apr 14 2004 at 11:10 AM Rating: Good
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I'm inclined to say any, be that Creatine or human growth hormone. If that requires making a list of things which are acceptable to take, then so be it. If it's not on the list then it is illegal until otherwise specified by the Commish.

Totem
#9 Apr 14 2004 at 11:13 AM Rating: Good
Starting today? Or retroactive to 98?

EDIT: and lest I be accused of being oblique, I will clarify.
I believe that he used supplements. I believe that there were potentially steroid precursers in his regimen. But I do not believe that he in any way violated the rules of MLB or that he violated any laws. That being said, no records that he sets can be "suspect".

Edited, Wed Apr 14 12:13:42 2004 by MoebiusLord
#10 Apr 14 2004 at 12:13 PM Rating: Good
Official Shrubbery Waterer
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I'd have to agree with Moe. Bonds is not only a tremendous player, but he has an amazing work ethic. Hell, steroids or not, any guy playing this sport in his 40's has to be either a) insane, or b) extremely dedicated.

And on a side note, as a Cubs fan, I could not let this slide. Sammy Sosa DOES NOT take steroids, and anybody who knows ANYTHING can tell you so. In fact, he actually LOST weight before this season. He has lost weight and gained quickness, and in he end, bat speed is the most important thing when hitting.
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#11 Apr 14 2004 at 12:36 PM Rating: Good
Cun to domeeneecan reepoobli. Teh dem Sammy sosa sen yoo.
#12 Apr 14 2004 at 12:54 PM Rating: Decent
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There's no doubt in my mind that Mark McGwire used steroids. He presented every visible symptom of steroid abuse.


Mark McGwire admitted to using androstenedione(sp?). It is very similar chemically and gives many of the same benefits as steroids. He stopped using them at the end of his record breaking year because of the bad publicity. At no time that he was using them were they against the law or against the rules of MLB.

#13 Apr 14 2004 at 4:52 PM Rating: Good
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My two cents worth here. I agree with those who says that the supplements should not be declare illegal retrospectibly. The rules and regulations are time sensitive. What may be perfectly acceptable may become illegal and vice versa. There are many instances in history regarding this. Prohibition made alcoholic beverage illegal but once it was revoked, drinking alcohol became totally acceptable. Cocaine used to be prescribed as a medicine by doctors in the past before it became illegal. So, does this mean we should seek out and punish those people now who used cocaine long time ago as a medicine?

Taking these supplements fully knowing that it will becomes illegal is unethical. However, unless the substance is declare illegal, why should we punish those who used it in the past not knowing it will be illegal? If Andro was not illegal in the past, I don't see why we should take away people's accomplishments today just because in today's view the supplement is illegal. Maybe in 5 years the studies prove that Andro is nothing but super vitamin supplement and it becomes legal in the profession sports? Does that mean that accomplishments of those people who used it in the past all of sudden becomes legit?

Well, These are my thoughts on this issue.

Taushar

Edit: spelling mistakes.

Edited, Wed Apr 14 18:36:26 2004 by Taushar
#14 Apr 14 2004 at 4:53 PM Rating: Good
Tracer Bullet
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The real problem for me is MLB's ridiculous "punishments" for steroid use:
 
#1.  Treatment 
#2.  15-day suspension or fine of up to $10,000 
#3.  25-day suspension or fine of up to $25,000 
#4.  50-day suspension or fine of up to $50,000 
#5.  One-year suspension or fine of up to $100,000 
 
 


You have to get caught FIVE TIMES before they suspend you for a season. And no lifetime bans.

I think a lot of the players actually want a much stricter steroid policy, as evidenced by the White Sox last season. The entire team threatened not to submit to testing, which would technically give them all positive test results. This in turn would drive the league steroid use average up to the point where stricter rules would be implemented. However, the stupid MPLBA Union President stopped it. What they need is a current or recent player in that presidents position. I vote for Cal Ripken.



cheers Smiley: boozing
#15 Apr 14 2004 at 5:36 PM Rating: Decent
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Oh, and the idea that he just got good in the last 5 years is ludicrous.



Yes it is ludicrous. He's always been an exceptional player. But in the last three years his number have taken an absurd jump.

From 1986 - 2000:

AB: 7456 Hits: 2157 = Bavg of .289

From 2001- 2003:

AB: 1269 Hits: 438 = Bavg of .345

So Bonds, at the age of 36 (2001), an age when most men suddenly come to grips with reality and time begins to have their way with them, suddenly GETS BETTER. And not by a little. He suddenly turns into a combination of Ty Cobb and Babe Ruth all in one. Amazing. You would think that if he had that sort of talent in him all along, he'd have demonstrated it at some point.

Ignore his power numbers, why did he suddenly become a GREAT hitter? Prior to 2001 he was a .289 lifetime hitter! Is 'work ehtic' alone supposed to have jumped his batting averag 55 points? Suuuuuuuuuuuure. It 'work ethic' were the most significant factor, Roger Clemens should be able to throw his fastball about 150mph now.

If anyone can show me any professional athelete that has shown a similar jump in performance at that age, please do.

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Bonds has tremendous hand-eye coordination which allows him to be an insanly accurate hitter, and THAT is why he's the player he is, size does not make that much of a difference when it comes to home run hitting


His hand-eye coordination wasn't all that impressive before 2001, huh? Many people have pointed out in similar arguments that more muscles does not necessarily equate to better hitting. And to a degree they have a point. But if you take someone that can already hit, and juice him up so that he's much stronger, his hitting will improve. Those deep fly balls that were once outs will now be home runs. Slow grounders that were easy outs become hard grounders that slip past infielders. The fastball that you couldn't get around on before and fouled off suddenly connects with the fat part of your bat, etc.

Edited, Wed Apr 14 18:39:23 2004 by Deathwysh

Edited, Wed Apr 14 18:41:03 2004 by Deathwysh

Edited, Wed Apr 14 18:45:41 2004 by Deathwysh
#16 Apr 14 2004 at 5:37 PM Rating: Good
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Baseball is different. The game's traditions make it implicit in unwritten rules that certain conduct is a detriment to the game. Whle cheating and getting an edge is as much a part of baseball (filing cleats, vaseline on the ball, corking the bat, etc), it is understood that certain lines were not to be crossed.

While it may be debated whether or not steroid use is wrong in the context of the game, one major factor in determining its' value is where the players stand on the issue. As of right now, the vast majority of the players want it out of the game for a variety of reasons ranging from personal safety (both because of the physical damage steroids do and the danger in having a ball rocket past your head off the bat of an over-muscled hitter) to career security (having everyone on the same level playing field makes it more likely a non-user will compete successfully against another athlete).

Part of the problem is the players union, wherein it is reluctant to give quarter on any issue, especially one where the superstars are having success; the owners, who like seeing seats being filled by spectators who want to watch high powered baseball; and lastly, the lack of a baseball commish who has total and complete control over the goings-on in MLB.

Steroid usage is really just a symptom, the tip of the iceberg so to speak. The bigger issue is who controls baseball.

Totem
#17 Apr 14 2004 at 5:45 PM Rating: Good
Don't limit it to Baseball, I bet Chris Barnes is pumping up in preparation for the next league match.






It took a lot of Google-ing to come up with a "Professional Bowler's" name, oddly enough, some people consider it a sport. Probably the fathers of girls who think Cheerleading is a sport.
#18 Apr 14 2004 at 5:49 PM Rating: Good
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How ya doin', Skeet? Give the wife a kiss for me. No, not mine, yours, silly.

Totem
#19 Apr 14 2004 at 7:37 PM Rating: Decent
Bah, the Espn 2 link disappeared, only thing I was gonna add was that I found it an intresting point that was made from the article about Blacks not being allowed to play during the era that a lot of these records were done.

Ya to me thats valid, anyone who didnt have to compete against blacks should have an asterisk next to their name as well.

Current policy on steriod testing in MLB allows a player time to cycle off before they are tested, anyone caught under these circumstances is an idiot. It really needs to be random and as big an infraction as using cocaine.

Of course we cant go back and disallow hits/homers and such for things that were legal at the time. But, we should make it so that going forward we dont allow this kind of cheating to continue.

Baseball has many unwritten rules like protecting your batters, using steriods is one of those unwritten rules it wasnt illegal but it cheapens the records and is frowned upon by its players.
#20 Apr 15 2004 at 12:09 AM Rating: Good
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Baseball has many unwritten rules like protecting your batters, using steriods is one of those unwritten rules it wasnt illegal but it cheapens the records and is frowned upon by its players.

How are you defining a steroid?
#21 Apr 15 2004 at 12:19 AM Rating: Good
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So Bonds, at the age of 36 (2001), an age when most men suddenly come to grips with reality and time begins to have their way with them, suddenly GETS BETTER.

And this means he MUST be juicing. OMG!!11! He got soo much better, there has to be another explanation. He can't have just gotten better, he must have had help.
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You would think that if he had that sort of talent in him all along, he'd have demonstrated it at some point.

Umm, 3 MVPs, several gold gloves, almost 400 home runs, etc., etc., and so on. Where's the question?
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Ignore his power numbers, why did he suddenly become a GREAT hitter? Prior to 2001 he was a .289 lifetime hitter! Is 'work ehtic' alone supposed to have jumped his batting averag 55 points?

He matured. He found patience at the plate. He began to take walks instead of Ks. Discipline. Learned to go the other way against the most over-pronounced shift in the history of Major League Baseball.
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If anyone can show me any professional athelete that has shown a similar jump in performance at that age, please do.

Ah. The fact that it is unprecedented is still the issue, eh? Before the Great One, no one in the history of Hockey had been as prolific. Before MJ no one in the 1 spot had ever dominated the game so dramaticly. Were they juicing? They must have been for their entire careers.
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But if you take someone that can already hit, and juice him up so that he's much stronger, his hitting will improve. Those deep fly balls that were once outs will now be home runs. Slow grounders that were easy outs become hard grounders that slip past infielders. The fastball that you couldn't get around on before and fouled off suddenly connects with the fat part of your bat, etc.

More bulk = less agility. This dog won't hunt.

Bottom line, don't hate on Barry because he is a phenominal player. He maintains he never used illegal steroids. Until there is proof that he did, leave off. And the comparison some make to Rose, there is plenty of proof Rose bet. And plenty of proof he gave a big F'uck You to the world for years and years. This is no where near the case.
#22 Apr 15 2004 at 1:09 AM Rating: Good
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Quote:

Quote:
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If anyone can show me any professional athelete that has shown a similar jump in performance at that age, please do.
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Ah. The fact that it is unprecedented is still the issue, eh? Before the Great One, no one in the history of Hockey had been as prolific. Before MJ no one in the 1 spot had ever dominated the game so dramaticly. Were they juicing? They must have been for their entire careers.


I would add Lance Armstrong to this list. Since no one before him ever had won a Tour de France, let alone 4 of them, after having a cancer devastate his body, they started to assume that he used steroid to win those races. To me this is such an insult to the person who put in so much of their lives on pursuing the sports they love. They have tested Lance several times for stroid and he passed every time. Still people are suspicious of his achievements because he is at "the age" where he should not be so succeeding, specially after surviving a cancer. He continues to defy logic.

Taushar
#23 Apr 15 2004 at 1:36 AM Rating: Good
Totem wrote:
How ya doin', Skeet? Give the wife a kiss for me. No, not mine, yours, silly.

Totem


I'm pretty good, but Thundra would like to think that her shi[b][/b] don't stink, but lean a little bit closer and you'll see her roses really smell like poo poo poo.



I love outkast
#24 Apr 15 2004 at 1:50 AM Rating: Decent
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Quote:
Before the Great One, no one in the history of Hockey had been as prolific. Before MJ no one in the 1 spot had ever dominated the game so dramaticly. Were they juicing? They must have been for their entire careers.


Its not that its unprecedented, its that its implausible, that at the age of 36 he should have THAT big a jump in performance at a time when everyone else is slowing down. Jordan and Gretzky didn't suddenly up their production during the final stages of their careers. They were both great their entire careers and their performance fell off predictably with age. That can't be said of Bonds.

You act as if there were absolutely no evidence that Bonds has used steroids. Despite Balco, despite admissions from people around him that they've given him steroids, you refuse to even consider the possibility. Very simply, if it quacks like a duck, its probably a duck. You can keep believing its a pigeon if that makes you happy though.

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More bulk = less agility. This dog won't hunt.


Not true at all. You can see proof of it every sunday afternoon during the football season.

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Bottom line, don't hate on Barry because he is a phenominal player. He maintains he never used illegal steroids. Until there is proof that he did, leave off. And the comparison some make to Rose, there is plenty of proof Rose bet. And plenty of proof he gave a big F'uck You to the world for years and years. This is no where near the case.


I don't hate Bonds at all. I think he's a jerk, but that's a long way from hating him. He can maintain that he never used steroids until the day he dies, but there is plenty of evidence to suggest that he did. OJ Simpson maintains that he didn't kill his wife. Do you believe him too?

Quote:
I would add Lance Armstrong to this list. Since no one before him ever had won a Tour de France, let alone 4 of them, after having a cancer devastate his body, they started to assume that he used steroid to win those races. To me this is such an insult to the person who put in so much of their lives on pursuing the sports they love. They have tested Lance several times for stroid and he passed every time. Still people are suspicious of his achievements because he is at "the age" where he should not be so succeeding, specially after surviving a cancer. He continues to defy logic.


I was thinking about Lance when I wrote that statement. He was the only I could think of that could even come close to a similar situation. But Lance did use steroids, they were part of his treatment. What affect that may have had his abilities I don't know. But even with having won as much as he has, its not as if he's suddenly able to finish the Tour a day and half ahead of the next rider. Which is what he'd have to do to present the same kind of sudden increase performance that Bonds has. In addition, endurance races are very much different than other sports in that willpower is often the deciding factor. Given two riders of roughly equal abilities, the one who's more willing or capable of enduring great deals of pain is the one that's going to win.

Edited, Thu Apr 15 02:51:02 2004 by Deathwysh
#25 Apr 15 2004 at 2:19 AM Rating: Decent
I would say that steriods are a performance enhancing drug.

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More bulk = less agility. This dog won't hunt


As to this I would say hmmm so it must be coincidence that all our current most profilic home run hitters are big men.
#26 Apr 15 2004 at 5:32 AM Rating: Good
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You act as if there were absolutely no evidence that Bonds has used steroids.

There is no evidence that illegal steroids were used by Barry Bonds. Period.
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Despite Balco, despite admissions from people around him that they've given him steroids,...

His trainer is a partner in BALCO. His trainer offered him illegal substances, and the trainer's lawyer has stated that Barry always refused illegal substances.
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Not true at all. You can see proof of it every sunday afternoon during the football season.

LOL If that's the measure, Barry is in no way a big man. Not that I will even begin the argument over whether or not football should even be considered a sport.
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I don't hate Bonds at all.

Perhaps not, but I didn't say you did. I said don't hate on Bonds, which you are in spades.
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OJ Simpson maintains that he didn't kill his wife. Do you believe him too?

OJ was convicted in civil court of wrongful death. There was never really a question of whether he did it or not, just a question of guilt or innocence.
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In addition, endurance races are very much different than other sports in that willpower is often the deciding factor. Given two riders of roughly equal abilities, the one who's more willing or capable of enduring great deals of pain is the one that's going to win.

This one's funny too. A full baseball season is an incredible endurance race. To win his third consecutive MVP, Bonds endured the death of his father, the man who was his rock, to lead his team to a wire to wire NL West title. But it couldn't have been his willingness or ability to endure. It must have been the juice. :)
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