Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Ryan Braun, PED's and Blue Skies


Ryan Braun lied. Ryan Braun is a cheater. And in other news, the sky is blue.

It is just about as shocking to me that Ryan Braun lied about being clean as I am that the sun rose in the east this morning. Why wouldn’t he? There is no downside, no real consequence either way. At the end of the day, Braun is just the next in a long, seemingly never ending, line of professional athletes who use, and subsequently lie about using, Performance Enhancing Drugs (PED’s). Ryan Braun isn’t the problem; he is a product, the result, of the problem. It is time to address the elephant in the room- the root of the PED epidemic in Baseball.

Major League Baseball, in particular, has created a culture that not only fosters, but encourages, the use of PED’s. Yep, I said it. Whether this culture was created knowingly and purposefully, or whether it is the byproduct of a campaign to do anything possible to save Baseball from itself after the ’94 strike, I can’t say and we may never know. It almost doesn’t matter. What does matter is that this epidemic is a runaway train that lost its brakes hundreds of miles ago. It has gotten so out of control, and so beyond itself, that one could fairly easily argue that players in the Major League system, at any level, are stupid not to juice else risk losing their job to someone who does, or worse- never get the job in the first place. Think about that, MLB has created a league in which players are putting themselves at a huge disadvantage if they DON’T cheat. Bueller?!

The worst part of all of this is that somewhere along the way, we lost the game. The game as we knew it, America’s pastime, has become completely unrecognizable and, instead, we’re left with the love child of MLB The Show and the WWE. For shame. The only way any of this is going to change is if the consequences of PED use become greater than the contracts, dollars and infamy the competitive advantage their use affords. Give me a break with the 50 and 100 game suspensions. Why not just give known offenders a tropical vacation and a welcome back bash upon their return? If you’d have told me in High School that the consequences for being caught cheating were a 5 day suspension for the first offense and a 10 day suspension for the second offense, after which I’d be welcomed back to class with the grade my cheating earned me fully intact, you’d better believe I’d have been a 4.0 student with a few multiple day vacations. The only way to clean up the game and to restore it anywhere close to its glory, is if being caught hits cheaters where it matters- in their pocket books and in their legacies. Wipe their numbers from the record books and ban them from the game they claim to love. Aggressive? I’d bet those Major Leaguers who do play the game cleanly don’t think so.

Baseball, in its purest form, is a wonderful game. A game that transcends generations, age, and nationality, and if this latest scandal has taught us anything, it’s that it is time to stop paying lip service to cleaning up the game, and to actually do it.

C

PS- Aaron Rodgers, if you were going to reprise the role of Squints Palledorous from the Sandlot, I hope Benny at least hooked you up with a new pair of PF Flyers.




1 comment:

  1. RONG! Lie, cheat, steal. It's the American way. No one is motivated to stop doping as there is too much money to be had for players, GM’s, owners, sponsors, TV networks. The only mistake Braun made was his very public and adamant denial. He should have gone the Andy Pettitte route and claimed it was a one-time thing and beg for forgiveness. We would have given him a pass because he is good looking, well-spoken and has that cool Hebrew Hammer nickname. Instead he looks like a pompous, arrogant a$$clown. Either way, there will always be cheaters, so I say we should embrace them. We all want our athletes to run faster, jump higher and hit harder. Fact! The fans, including Dame in the Game, are guilty of creating this culture. Voice your displeasure by boycotting games and not purchasing paraphernalia. That is the only thing that will drive real, meaningful change. Professional sports haven't been pure for decades and will only continue to decay. And don't forget, chicks dig the long ball.

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