http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2007/05/13/SPGCPPQ6EJ1.DTL
Soon steroids will eclipse feel-good story of Warriors
Gwen Knapp
Sunday, May 13, 2007
Enjoy the Warriors while you can. They are a buffer, almost a mirage, a feel-good story that will quickly segue into the Summer of Cynicism. The schedule isn't finalized yet, but spring training starts Monday, when Floyd Landis' arbitration hearing opens in Malibu.
Barry Bonds' home-run chase will be at the heart of it all, dividing people more bitterly than electoral politics. Last week's ABC/ESPN poll, which showed that his support was divided along racial lines and that 52 percent of all respondents were rooting against him, cued a chorus of over-simplifiers. Bigoted player-hater or unscrupulous steroid enabler? Choose a side, and don't bother to shake the opponent's hand.
Hank Aaron tried to stay on the sidelines, and look what happened to him. Since he said last month that he would not be present for No. 756, citing his reluctance to board planes at age 73, he has been called a coward, a bitter old man and, in a particularly vile bit of code language, a humble southerner who has made himself palatable to white fans.
It's bad enough that these critics forget what Aaron endured when he took the home-run record from Babe Ruth 33 years ago, but they couldn't even be bothered to look back three years and see Aaron pulling for Bonds and defending him when people brought up the fact that his trainer had been indicted for distributing steroids. (Aaron also said then that he didn't want to travel.)
But as more information about Bonds came out of the BALCO investigation, Aaron very quietly withdrew his support, avoiding media inquiries on the topic. When he broke the silence to reiterate that he wouldn't try to see the record-breaker, he added a new reason alongside his age: a desire to be at peace and not answer a bunch of questions.
There won't be much peace in the coming weeks, unless those who doubt Bonds decide to censor themselves. But looking away from performance-enhancing drugs is just another form of cynicism, a ripple effect of Major League Baseball's longstanding willful ignorance.
Landis' case will play out in the meantime, a reminder that doping has ensnared every sport and athletes of every race. The Mennonite-reared cyclist, about as wide as the barrel of Bonds' bat, is appealing his positive test for synthetic testosterone from last year's Tour de France. He has assembled a legal defense team and public-relations machinery that make Bonds' resources look puny.
Landis has attacked the French lab that did the testing, asserting that it committed an array of technical errors and ethical lapses. He has also gone after the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency, most recently by saying that the agency -- which will defend the two-year suspension that Landis faces -- offered to cut him a deal if he implicated former teammate Lance Armstrong in doping violations. The point of this revelation is unclear.
USADA does offer shorter bans for additional information about doping, but why target Armstrong now? If unethical doping agencies, working with corrupt labs, wanted to nail Armstrong, they could have jimmied up the necessary test results when he was still competing. They wouldn't have needed Landis as a middleman.
But that's been the essence of Landis' defense -- throw a pot of pasta at the wall and see what sticks. Landis has complained several times that he has fewer rights than a criminal defendant. He should probably be grateful that he lives here, and not overseas. Operation Puerto, a police inquiry based on a raid of a Madrid medical lab, is European's cycling equivalent of BALCO, and it has been much, much tougher on the athletes.
Former Tour de France champion Jan Ullrich's Swiss home was raided while he was on his honeymoon. Prosecutors in Italy are investigating former Discovery rider Ivan Basso, who recently admitted that his blood had been stored in the Madrid lab, awaiting re-transfusion. The evidence against him was pretty damning. Investigators found bags of blood marked as "Birillo,'' the name of Basso's dog.
Does USADA have anything that compelling on Landis? For the next 10 days, the agency and Landis will both be on trial. The arbitration will be open to the media, a first in this country, allowing for unprecedented scrutiny. Plans to send a live feed out over the Web are in the works.
Will sports fans pay attention, or keep their focus solely on Bonds, preferring to argue about his personality and whether Curt Schilling apologized enough for ripping into the slugger last week?
Bonds' defenders want to look at the big picture, and that should take them beyond baseball, and beyond these borders. David Ortiz, one of Bonds' defenders, said last week that he couldn't be sure whether someone ever slipped something funny into the protein shakes he was given as a young player in the Dominican Republic.
He became furious when a headline suggested that he unwittingly doped himself, and rightly so. He raised a much larger issue about the dangers of a laissez-faire approach to steroids. It got lost in the noise, the early heat of the Summer of Cynicism.
E-mail Gwen Knapp at gknapp@sfchronicle.com.
This article appeared on page
C - 2 of the San Francisco Chronicle