By Mike Dorf
The announcement that Roger Clemens has been indicted for lying to Congress fills me with a flood of thoughts. It being Friday in late August, and me with a syllabus still to tweak, a draft with many incomplete footnotes, and a column to write, I'll confine myself to a few random observations about a curious fact: Of all the baseball players who took performance-enhancing drugs over the last couple of decades, only Roger Clemens and Barry Bonds ended up getting indicted for lying to Congress. Why not others?
Account No. 1: Bonds and Clemens were, respectively, the best hitter and the best pitcher of that era, and so they were inevitably going to attract the most scrutiny.
Account No. 2: Bonds and Clemens are both notorious for having difficulty getting along with others. Rafael Palmiero was generally better liked, so he caught a break.
Account No. 3: Clemens had no credibility to begin with. In June, during interleague play, Clemens had hit Mets catcher Mike Piazza in the head with a baseball. The Mets and Yankees then met in the World Series. With Clemens pitching, Piazza swung and the bat broke. As Piazza was running to first, Clemens picked up a large chunk of the bat and threw it at Piazza, nearly hitting him. After the game, Clemens denied that he was trying to hit Piazza with it. He explained that he thought the bat was the ball.
Account No. 4: Bonds, meanwhile, was undone by the before-and-after photos. Working out can add muscle mass, but it doesn't usually show up in an athlete's head. Given the obviousness of Bonds's juicing, his denials cried out for investigation.
Account No. 5: During his congressional testimony, Clemens tried to explain away the injections he was taking as Vitamin B12. One member of Congress asked Clemens why he was taking B12. "Are you a vegan?" Clemens was befuddled, answering that he didn't know what a vegan was. In this account, the indictment is simply the resulting bad karma.
Still, when all is said and done, there does seem something a bit unfair about the fact that Bonds and/or Clemens could be convicted for lying to Congress about taking steroids, while Oliver North's conviction for obstructing Congress was thrown out. But then, North never threw a bat at anyone.
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3 comments:
I have an amusing cartoon of Clemens as "batman" with a lit fuse on his helmet.
As to ball/bat confusion, that would still mean he threw a ball "at" Piazza. I was watching from home and read/listened to commentary about it. I believe the claim (though he very well could of at some point changed his story -- I know, who'd thunk it?) was that he was just psyched up and was throwing the bat shard away. That he wasn't throwing "at" anyone.
The vegan connection is cute. Very Dorfblog. My general sentiment is that I'm sick of seeing this guy and if Congress isn't going to go after bigger fish who lied to them, this is stupid. I don't want to feel any sympathy for the guy and selective prosecution might force me to show an iota of it.
"Congress" or anyone involved (including federal prosecutors) in such things.
My major concern is this:
Why is Congress, or any political body, concerned with the use of anabolic steroids, performance enhancing drugs, HGH, etc in professional sports.
I can't think of anything more modern American than watching a baseball game while eating less than digestible food, but still....couldn't our nations leaders find something more prudent to challenge?
I suppose it comes down to the regard for law as a whole. If we overlook lying to congress by a professional athlete, what's next? However, I couldn't begin to recite an entire list of prominent politicians and professionals that have done the same, and gotten away with it.
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