I know you're on dial up, but it is available to Netflix subscribers for online streaming if anyone else is interested.I'll take your advice and see if our local video store has it.
Thanks, pdx...
The thing that really rotted baseball was the people who run it, both the league and the union. Other sports have had this problem and have moved against it long ago. Baseball's powers that be not only turned a blind eye and sacrificed everything to petty interests, they actually LIKED it so they could play up all these records being broken.
I honestly don't think it's that straightforward. And I think that's part of the problem.Its straightforward cheating, which ruins the entire premise of an athletic competition. The most blatant, most ridiculous, most perverse and most direct cheat you can have athletically (perhaps excepting blood doping in an endurance sport) -- it gives you a body and physical abilities you cannot ahcieve on your own.
I have to agree. And it's not an acceptance by me of what these guys were (are) doing. The thing that makes it hard to condemn anyone during the Steroid Era is that Major League Baseball did nothing about it until a few years ago. What good is having a banned substances policy if you don't have a testing policy to accompany it? It's tantamount to CA lowering the highway speed limits, then laying off all CHP traffic officers.I honestly don't think it's that straightforward. And I think that's part of the problem.
Again, I'm not being dismissive about this. It's just kind of hard to fault the players when Baseball willingly let it happen. Truth be told, the Steroid Era (spearheaded by Mark McGwire, Sammy Sosa and Barry Bonds) saved Baseball. I wasn't into baseball during the home run chase, but I sat down and watched the entire series between the Cubs and Cardinals when McGwire broke the record. It excited people who weren't baseball fans, and bred a new generation of fans like myself. It also alienated a generation of historians and purists who will never return, and it's tainted hundreds of careers, all-time greats like Bonds who would have been Hall of Famers even before their alleged steroid use.
Assuming what he's saying is completely true, that's about the best reaction you can hope for. It certainly doesn't excuse anything, but that's a heck of a lot better than a couple other steroid users' reactions.
It should also be a huge help in allowing baseball to get over this story for the 2009 season.
It's a lot easier to do when guys like Bonds have already taken all of the heat from everyone. This ***hole gets no sympathy from me. There's a poll over at RealGm asking whether this will affect A-Rod getting into the HOF and the majority of the voters voted no, while the same ****ing poll was up when Bonds was going through this and it was the complete opposite. What a bunch of bs. I really hope they release the rest of that list soon. Expose the rest of the cowards that let one man's entire career go down in flames for something that a **** load of other players were doing. How about this from now on. If you're caught using steriods from here on out, you will be banned from the MLB forever. Easy as that.
While the publicity over steroids is harming baseball, I do agree with Supes that their use saved it. Steroids built the NFL into what it is today, and despite the fact that Slim doesn't care for it, it has become the highest grossing team sport in the nation. I don't believe that they are as clean as people think, they've just created a better perception that they are. The recent allegations about the 2006 Steelers were largely swept under the rug.Saved it? You mean let it continue on only for a bigger upcoming crash. The owners and players are both to blame. For the strike and not having a drug testing policy sooner. They created the whole mess in the first place.
Saved it? You mean let it continue on only for a bigger upcoming crash. The owners and players are both to blame. For the strike and not having a drug testing policy sooner. They created the whole mess in the first place.
While the publicity over steroids is harming baseball, I do agree with Supes that their use saved it. Steroids built the NFL into what it is today, and despite the fact that Slim doesn't care for it, it has become the highest grossing team sport in the nation. I don't believe that they are as clean as people think, they've just created a better perception that they are. The recent allegations about the 2006 Steelers were largely swept under the rug.
I really do believe it is the strike and the lack of salary cap and in particular the way one team and one agent have abused it that are the true reason for baseball's demise with the fans. This has lead for the press to turn on the players, and more than any other sport the baseball press dictates popular opinion.
Baseball really does need a salary cap, but my opinion is that the sport is more compelling because of the Yankees.
Fact is if I weren't a Sox fan I'd probably be gone by now. They are one of the few teams that has shown a willingness to spend and yet the Yankees payroll makes them look like the Oakland A's in comparison.Good ol' Sox fan...![]()
Well, I think the numbers support that assertion. The Yankees are good for baseball the same way the Lakers are good for basketball. It's a bigger deal when the Yankees are in the World Series than when it's the Phillies and the Rays, just like the Lakers vs. anybody is better than Cavs vs. Spurs, or Heat vs. Mavs.Fixed it for you.![]()
Good on them, but the league really ought to fix it for the benefit of the 20 or so teams that are barely treading water year in and year out.
I don't really want to get into that debate in this thread but the numbers can't support that assertion when you have no numbers regarding the opposing option to compare to. The question isn't whether the Yankees doing well within the natural cycle of the sport is good, it's whether having them and other big market teams consistently dominate the tops of the standings is good. That's why the Lakers one is a bad analogy, because they have a relatively small advantage over small market clubs. Another bad analogy is the NFL, but if you looked at that example you'd say parity is great for a sports league.Well, I think the numbers support that assertion. The Yankees are good for baseball the same way the Lakers are good for basketball. It's a bigger deal when the Yankees are in the World Series than when it's the Phillies and the Rays, just like the Lakers vs. anybody is better than Cavs vs. Spurs, or Heat vs. Mavs.
And they can point to the salary cap, etc. and say they can't compete with the big market teams so they have to build through the farm and then sell off players that achieve. They have won twice and immediately dismantled and I'm sure they cry that they have become victims of success. There should be a minimum salary to go with the cap, and if you won't pay it then sell the team or have it contracted.Hard part about that is there are certain teams that have no obvious desire to compete on a regular basis. The Marlins immediately come to mind.
I don't really want to get into that debate in this thread but the numbers can't support that assertion when you have no numbers regarding the opposing option to compare to. The question isn't whether the Yankees doing well within the natural cycle of the sport is good, it's whether having them and other big market teams consistently dominate the tops of the standings is good. That's why the Lakers one is a bad analogy, because they have a relatively small advantage over small market clubs. Another bad analogy is the NFL, but if you looked at that example you'd say parity is great for a sports league.
And they can point to the salary cap, etc. and say they can't compete with the big market teams so they have to build through the farm and then sell off players that achieve. They have won twice and immediately dismantled and I'm sure they cry that they have become victims of success. There should be a minimum salary to go with the cap, and if you won't pay it then sell the team or have it contracted.
But look at a team like the Rays, they've finally got a bunch of young studs and have shown willingness to spend in the past, but how long can it last if the Yankees start bidding after them? They proved they could beat the Sox, something the Yanks haven't done in 5 years![]()
Sorry Superman, I don't think you're getting it. Of course big market teams doing well is good for leagues. But big market teams with major competitive advantages is bad for leagues.
Pittsburgh vs Phoenix was the most watched Super Bowl (TV show?) of all time. The question (for another thread) is whether the sport is more compelling because of the Yankees. I say no, if there was more parity rather than one team with a humonguous payroll taking most of the best players, the sport would be more compelling. It's difficult to give examples to back up these assertions because baseball isn't doing it the other way. But I think the other sports that don't have the same imbalances are more compelling and are doing better, so take that for what it's worth.
I guess I inferred from your statement that having the Yankees always in contention was better than having a more level playing field, which I think is incorrect and far from fact. You seem to be arguing something else in defense of that statement so I guess my inferrence was wrong. Either way... not in this thread!![]()
Fair enough.By the way, this super bowl was the most watched: http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/playoffs2008/news/story?id=3882060
Ok. I think the Yankees would be good for baseball if there were a more level playing field. Since there isn't, I say they're not.Anyways, my point was simply that the Yankees are good for Baseball, level playing field or not.
I disagree with your assumption that this is going to kill Major League Baseball. It hasn't so far. The Mitchell Report didn't hurt ratings or attendance. A-Rod plays for the Yankees, who are already the most popular sports franchise in the world without him, and are opening a brand new stadium this season. Barry Bonds home run chase hasn't hurt baseball either.
If baseball takes a dip this season, it's likely because the economy has caused a lot of baseball fans to cut back.
By the way, this super bowl was the most watched: http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/playoffs2008/news/story?id=3882060