Gold9472
08-08-2007, 09:01 AM
Home-run king Bonds forever tainted
http://www.reuters.com/article/newsOne/idUSSP30418820070808?src=080807_0818_DOUBLEFEATURE _record_home_run
(Gold9472: As far as I'm concerned, his "title" is not legitimate.)
Wed Aug 8, 2007 12:51AM EDT
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Barry Bonds is the greatest master of baseball's most difficult skill -- hitting a ball thrown at more than 100 miles an hour over the outfield wall for a home run.
Yet the San Francisco Giants outfielder has also come to symbolize the nagging doubts many fans have about the spread of performance-enhancing drugs in Major League Baseball and other professional sports since the 1990s.
The 43-year-old seven-times National League Most Valuable Player broke Major League Baseball's career record on Tuesday by belting out his 756th home run, one more than the number that made Hank Aaron the home-run king for the last 33 years.
Yet many fans are not celebrating what might otherwise be an occasion for national pride and marketing hoopla because of suspicion he may not have spoken truthfully when denying steroid use.
A sometimes abrasive personality has not helped his image, and has caused many fans outside San Francisco to jeer the slugger and root against his record run.
During his career, Bonds has set a wide array of records, from most home runs in a single season to most walks in a season and in a career. Over the years he has hit a home run every 13 at bats, far more frequently that Aaron's every 16 plus at bats.
"I don't know if he is the greatest ever, but he is soon going to be the greatest home-run hitter ever," Hall of Famer Willie McCovey, a vocal Bonds supporter, told Reuters ahead of Tuesday's game.
BASEBALL FAMILY
Born in 1964 in Riverside, California, the 13-times All-Star grew up steeped in baseball.
His father Bobby was a power-hitting outfielder from 1968-1974, hitting 332 home runs in his career and his godfather, San Francisco Giant Willie Mays, was one of the greatest players in the history of the sport.
Barry Bonds started his Major League career with the Pittsburgh Pirates in 1986 season as a skinny rookie.
He joined the Giants in 1993, and then as he entered his mid 30s, grew noticeably more muscular and showed more power behind the plate.
In 2001, Bonds hit an all-time single-season record 73 home runs, yet a federal investigation into the BALCO nutritional lab near San Francisco soon after cast an unwelcome spotlight on possible links to doping.
According to his lawyer, Bonds told a San Francisco federal grand jury that he never knowingly used steroids.
His personal trainer and close friend Greg Anderson ended up in jail on steroid distribution charges in the case.
The BALCO probe continues to shadow the slugger's considerable accomplishments as federal authorities investigate whether the left fielder lied during his testimony.
In the meantime, Anderson has made a return trip to prison starting last year because he has refused to testify in the case.
A photo of Bonds still adorns the hallway where BALCO's owner now operates a renamed nutritional supplement business.
All of that background has muted the excitement around his home-run record quest.
When Sharp Electronics launched an advertising campaign for its televisions earlier this summer, it featured Aaron rather than the soon-to-be home run king Bonds.
http://www.reuters.com/article/newsOne/idUSSP30418820070808?src=080807_0818_DOUBLEFEATURE _record_home_run
(Gold9472: As far as I'm concerned, his "title" is not legitimate.)
Wed Aug 8, 2007 12:51AM EDT
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Barry Bonds is the greatest master of baseball's most difficult skill -- hitting a ball thrown at more than 100 miles an hour over the outfield wall for a home run.
Yet the San Francisco Giants outfielder has also come to symbolize the nagging doubts many fans have about the spread of performance-enhancing drugs in Major League Baseball and other professional sports since the 1990s.
The 43-year-old seven-times National League Most Valuable Player broke Major League Baseball's career record on Tuesday by belting out his 756th home run, one more than the number that made Hank Aaron the home-run king for the last 33 years.
Yet many fans are not celebrating what might otherwise be an occasion for national pride and marketing hoopla because of suspicion he may not have spoken truthfully when denying steroid use.
A sometimes abrasive personality has not helped his image, and has caused many fans outside San Francisco to jeer the slugger and root against his record run.
During his career, Bonds has set a wide array of records, from most home runs in a single season to most walks in a season and in a career. Over the years he has hit a home run every 13 at bats, far more frequently that Aaron's every 16 plus at bats.
"I don't know if he is the greatest ever, but he is soon going to be the greatest home-run hitter ever," Hall of Famer Willie McCovey, a vocal Bonds supporter, told Reuters ahead of Tuesday's game.
BASEBALL FAMILY
Born in 1964 in Riverside, California, the 13-times All-Star grew up steeped in baseball.
His father Bobby was a power-hitting outfielder from 1968-1974, hitting 332 home runs in his career and his godfather, San Francisco Giant Willie Mays, was one of the greatest players in the history of the sport.
Barry Bonds started his Major League career with the Pittsburgh Pirates in 1986 season as a skinny rookie.
He joined the Giants in 1993, and then as he entered his mid 30s, grew noticeably more muscular and showed more power behind the plate.
In 2001, Bonds hit an all-time single-season record 73 home runs, yet a federal investigation into the BALCO nutritional lab near San Francisco soon after cast an unwelcome spotlight on possible links to doping.
According to his lawyer, Bonds told a San Francisco federal grand jury that he never knowingly used steroids.
His personal trainer and close friend Greg Anderson ended up in jail on steroid distribution charges in the case.
The BALCO probe continues to shadow the slugger's considerable accomplishments as federal authorities investigate whether the left fielder lied during his testimony.
In the meantime, Anderson has made a return trip to prison starting last year because he has refused to testify in the case.
A photo of Bonds still adorns the hallway where BALCO's owner now operates a renamed nutritional supplement business.
All of that background has muted the excitement around his home-run record quest.
When Sharp Electronics launched an advertising campaign for its televisions earlier this summer, it featured Aaron rather than the soon-to-be home run king Bonds.