Thank goodness, Barry finally did it. Did it on the road, but close enough to home that there wasn’t a great number of zealots beating their breasts or ripping out a hank of their own hair.
He’s tied Babe Ruth, and soon will be the most prolific left-handed hitter the game has known.
It’s one hell of an accomplishment. Kind of mind-bending. But it’s still just a milestone. Aaron still has 755, and he appears safe to me. Bonds will pass Ruth, but there’s no way we’re ever going to forget him. Like Jayson Stark noted in a great recent column, he’s still Babe Freaking Ruth.
I’ve avoided discussing whether records are “tainted,” both in casual conversation and in this blog. A lot of this has to do with laziness, as I can’t summon the energy to overcome the superficiality of the whole mess. The mass media hasn’t done a good job putting any of it in perspective. There are a few voices out there, but they are mostly drowned out by the TV machine.
I’ve said before that I’m not much bothered by steroids or any other “performance enhancer.” But let’s pretend that I was. Would I find records set by individuals confirmed to have used such things to be suspect? Yeah, I probably would. But that actually would be the least of my worries. If I thought that the use of such things was cheating, wouldn’t I be more concerned about the outcome of games? I would. But you don’t hear much about that kind of concern, mostly because things start to get messy. Do you invalidate all a team’s wins when you find a violation, NCAA-style? Or do you look the other way? If you don’t invalidate the wins, aren’t you implicitly allowing what you said you wanted outlawed?
All right, forget the enhancers. What about the performance depressors? There’s quite a few alcoholics in the major leagues, I’m willing to wager. Gamblers, too. If you’re fighting a hangover or intoxicated on the field, you’re as close as you can be to throwing a game. Where’s the outrage over that? At least I know that someone sucking down HGH is trying to win the damn game.
I’m not even going to start with things like due process, civil liberties and the even more complicated issue of labor relations. Bottom line is that it’s just not that simple.
Barry Bonds has hit 714 home runs in the major leagues. Only two other people have ever done as much. Two. That’s pretty damn amazing.
I can’t decide what was more amazing: The Giants score 34 in three days in Houston or Russ Springer’s and Phil Garner’s denials that Springer was throwing at Bonds. Anyone with eyes could see that Springer was trying to hit him. It was only his own incompetence that made it take five pitches. That Springer didn’t even bother to appeal tells you something.
I fully expected Benitez to blow the game twice Saturday. He almost did it.
Speaking of pitchers, did you see that Liriano, Bonser and Nathan are up with the Twins? People are still amazed at that deal.
"That's a special arm, and I can't believe the Giants gave him up; that's shocking to me," Milwaukee's Jeff Cirillo said. "They got Nathan, Bonser and Liriano for Pierzynski? Are you kidding me?"
On the other hand, the Angels put Alfonzo on waivers, so that Finley deal is looking like a robbery.
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