This is my column for the Dec. 3 issue of the Pilot
News in Plymouth, Indiana. Feedback is welcome.
I have always loved baseball. Well, love may not be a
strong enough emotion to describe how I feel. As a
kid, I was pretty normal. I collected comic books,
interesting looking rocks and played a lot of cowboy
and Indian in my back yard.
I played ball a little with my older brothers and
sister and neighbors. But didn’t really like it since
I was so much smaller than they were. When I played my
first year of Little League ball, we had a game in
Norway, Iowa, the arch-rivals of my hometown. Norway
was quite the baseball capitol of rural Iowa,
producing big league players Mike Boddicker and Bruce
Kimm.
Anyway, before our game I ventured to an eating
establishment with some other players. I wanted some
chewing gum. I bought a pack of baseball cards from
Topps, which of course included a stick of gum. In
that first pack of cards from the 1972 season, I
received cards of both Johnny Bench and Roberto
Clemente. I was instantly hooked.
I believe from that day forward, I have been into
baseball worship. I agree with a lot of what Susan
Sarandon’s character in the movie “Bull Durham” said
about the church of baseball. I can take a lot of
stress out of my life by sitting in a minor league
baseball stadium and just take in the feel of the
ballpark.
I have a game on my computer called Diamond Mind
Baseball. I find it totally awesome and I can spend
several hours at a time sitting there and playing the
game. Ask my wife.
But every now and then, one of my heroes does
something to shake me to the core. Jason Giambi did
that this week.
In case you have been hiding your head under a rock,
the San Francisco Chronicle published transcripts of
the testimony of Giambi, star first baseman for the
New York Yankees, in last year’s Grand Jury case
against Balco, a firm that reportedly supplied
steroids to professional athletes.
Giambi, along with many other stars connected to the
case, have repeatedly denied using
performance-enhancing drugs. But Giambi evidently
testified to using steroids for three seasons. I
probably should not have been shocked, but I was
crushed. Dismayed. Stunned. Deeply, deeply saddened,
for sure.
Yes, of course I know that professional athletes
should not be worshiped or made out to be heroes.
Many, including Charles Barkley, have emphasized that
they are not role models. Sorry, but that goes with
the territory. Whether you like it or not, young kids
are going to look up to you.
If this was just a case of one fallen hero, it would
not be that big of a deal. Giambi is not the first to
admit use of banned performance-enhancing drugs. Jose
Canseco admitted using them as did the late Ken
Caminiti, who died last month of cocaine overdose.
But the whole baseball world is waiting for the next
shoe to drop. For sure there will be others. It has
tarnished the great game.
I recall several years ago when my oldest son, Jimmie,
was playing Little League baseball. He needed a new
glove and we bought him a real nice one. In fact, I
still have it. It was a Darryl Strawberry model. At
the time, the Straw was all the rage of the baseball
world. He had such talent. It seemed he was destined
for induction at the Baseball Hall of Fame in
Cooperstown, N.Y.
Jimmie was really proud of his glove. We played catch
in the back yard for about an hour. Then we went
inside to watch SportsCenter. Their lead story that
day involved none other than Mr. Strawberry going into
the what was the first of who knows how many stints in
drug rehab for his addiction with cocaine. I could see
that Jimmie, then probably about 10 years old, was
bothered by this turn of events. I had no idea how
much he was bothered by it until the next day.
I was one of the coaches for Jimmie’s Little League
team. I heard the other guys ask Jimmie about his
glove. They wanted to see it. He refused to let them
see he was using a Darryl Strawberry model of glove.
I wonder how many Jason Giambi gloves will begin
collecting dust now in New York city?
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Gang; This is my column for the Dec. 3 issue of the Pilot News in Plymouth, Indiana. Feedback is welcome. I have always loved baseball. Well, love may not be a...
- Your column lost any credibility it had the minute you said that SAmmy should remain a cub until he retires. On one hand your saddened about the Giambi...
I don't know that it lost any credibility. You simply disagree. Certainly there are strong suggestions that Sammy may have been using. "Obvious' might be just...
Just think of the sneezing incident...unless you're taking 'roids of any kind for a significant amount of time (more than a year most likely) you don't sneeze...
What the heck does a back going out have to do with Steroids? jim in indiana greenerfan15 <no_reply@yahoogroups.com> wrote: Just think of the sneezing...
Um, it has a LOT to do with it, actually. We all know Sammy was on 'roids, and he was on them for a while. When you take steroids for a while, it actually...
so we should take your post as the gospel and stop duscussing it? Sorry but some of your post does make sense but the school lesson is missing some huge holes....
... <<When you take steroids for a while, it actually weakens your muscles. Look at Mark McGwire a few years back. After taking andro and creatine for so many...
Au contraire. That's exactly what my wife did. And I can guarantee you that she didn't take roids, for any reason. She did however, herniate a disk, which...
Whatever, we all have our own opinions here. Sammy did not herniate a disk, he pulled the muscle. I was merely explaining what steroids had in common with it...
You know, I do too. However, you laid out a scenario (with no factual evidence) that precluded any other explanation for his back problem other than steroids,...
I wasn't saying that the herniated disk thing wasn't a possibility with Sammy, just that it was very unlikely in his case. I know that there are other possible...
On Tue, 07 Dec 2004 03:23:14 -0000, "greenerfan15" ... Well, while I make no judgments about how likely it is that Sammy used steroids, that would be good...
I haven't heard anything really about Grudz. It appears that he isn't in the Cubs' plans in any way, shape or form, which is a shame if they don't resign...
I have not seen anything official yet, but I keep hearing Nomar/Walker will resign today or tomorrow. But I agree, if they can't get Walker signed today, I...
I'd like to see the Cubs sign Nomar and Walker. I think they play well together. I don't think we've got room for two starting second basemen. It's not like...
Its official... the Cubs arent gonna try to sign him. I think its a big mistake. Not only did he collect most RBI/HR's this season, but he was a clubhouse...
Any reasons for not at least making a run at him? Too expensive or what? Who do we have for that position now? rseliman <no_reply@yahoogroups.com> wrote: Its...
Well, I'm not sure how you can think resigning a 39 (soon to be 40) year old OF that talked retirement at one point during the season, coming off a career year...
Jason Dubois ... __________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Read only the mail you want - Yahoo! Mail SpamGuard. http://promotions.yahoo.com/new_mail...
I agree with Matt Huber completely. Very good in 2004 but little future in Alou at age 39. PLUS, he is a cancer in the clubhouse! (Umpire bater, leader of the...
I'm not an Alou supporter and i'm glad we didn't take him back but you are very wrong to call him a clubhouse cancer. I heard Kerry Wood in an interview on AM...
Two sides to that. On one hand, it isn't a constructive thing to do. On the other hand, they deserved it. These guys choked as surely as the 1969 Cubs did. ...
My fault forget about the age thing. Good decision who needs a 40 year old OF anyway. Matt Huber <mhuber92211@...> wrote: Well, I'm not sure how you can...
... The flip side is that he came emotionally unglued down the stretch, with his insane "The umpires hate me" routine. That's not the kind of leadership they...
... And face it- he's old. Not too old to be effective, mind you. But if the Cubs are going to continue to contend for a while, they're going to have to get...
I believe that They didn't even consider Alou due to the Sosa situation. If you get Alou back and can't move Sosa, you can't even consider Beltran. This is...