Journal Pioneer

Time has come

Bonds, Clemens deserve to be in Cooperstow­n

- BY PAUL NEWBERRY Paul Newberry is a sports columnist for The Associated Press.

Barry Bonds and Roger Clemens will probably have to wait a little longer to get their plaques in the Baseball Hall of Fame. But that day is coming.

As it should.

Bonds and Clemens are essentiall­y a package deal – the best hitter and pitcher of their time, both heavily tainted by the Steroids Era even though they never tested positive or admitted wrongdoing.

Some Hall of Famers, led by former Cincinnati Reds great Joe Morgan, have urged media voters (myself included) not to select Bonds, Clemens or anyone else with links to that disgracefu­l period in the game’s history.

That sentiment is understand­able, but the issues are more complex.

Back in November, Morgan sent a letter that laid out three parameters for denying entry into the Hall: those who failed drug tests, acknowledg­ed using steroids, or were identified in the Mitchell Report investigat­ion into baseball’s rampant doping in the 1990s and early 2000s.

We can all agree on those first two roadblocks.

Mark McGwire came clean on using performanc­e-enhancing drugs, so it’s only right he didn’t claim a hallowed spot in Cooperstow­n despite 583 career homers. Let’s hope the same fate awaits Manny Ramirez, who has Hall of Fame credential­s but twice tested positive for banned substances. He’s on the ballot for the second time this year, after coming up far short (23.8 per cent) of the necessary 75 per cent threshold on his first try.

He will never appear on my ballot.

But Morgan’s third standard – having your name turn up in the Mitchell Report – is more problemati­c.

“I recognize there are players identified as users on the Mitchell Report who deny they were users,” Morgan wrote. “That’s why this is a tricky issue. Not everything is black and white – there are shades of grey here.”

He went on to say, “It still occurs to me that anyone who took body-altering chemicals in a deliberate effort to cheat the game we love, not to mention they cheated current and former players, and fans too, doesn’t belong in the Hall of Fame.

By cheating, they put up huge numbers, and they made great players who didn’t cheat look smaller by comparison, taking away from their achievemen­ts and considerat­ion for the Hall of Fame. That’s not right.”

While I certainly see merit in Morgan’s argument, my views on Bonds and Clemens have softened since I left them off my Hall of Fame ballot when they were first eligible in 2013. My reasoning is two-fold. First, both players were worthy of induction before anyone questioned what they might be putting into their bodies. Bonds was a three-time MVP and clearly the game’s best player in the pre-BALCO era, a slender outfielder who had that rare combinatio­n of power and speed. Long before his body grew to cartoonish proportion­s, culminatin­g with a dubious 73 homers in 2001, he had nine straight seasons with at least 25 homers and 28 stolen bases, becoming one of only four members of the 40-40 club (42 homers, 40 stolen bases) in 1996.

Clemens’ career follows a similar arc. He had an MVP award, three Cy Young awards and four ERA titles before his 30th birthday, certainly enough to push him into the Cooperstow­n mix even if he didn’t have an eyebrow-raising career revival in his 30s and 40s, when he claimed four more Cy Youngs but emerged as one of the most notorious figures in the Mitchell Report.

Which brings us to the second, more important, point. I have no idea how many players from the Steroids Era were using. No one does. Surely there were other players, some of whom may already be in Cooperstow­n, who at least dabbled in chemical enhancemen­t. Frankly, they would’ve been foolish not to if they wanted to keep up, given baseball’s decision to largely ignore the problem because it needed freakish power hitters to lure back fans after a devastatin­g labour dispute in 1994.

This isn’t an endorsemen­t of doping.

It’s a recognitio­n of reality. Certainly, with each passing year, Bonds and Clemens become less polarizing.

In their first year of eligibilit­y, Clemens was named of 37.6 per cent of the ballots, while Bonds was picked on 36.2 per cent. Their support actually dipped the next year, but it has been rising steadily since then – always in tandem – and appears likely to take another jump when the next group of inductees is revealed today.

A year ago, Clemens was penciled in 239 ballots (54.1 per cent), while Bonds appeared on 238 (53.8 per cent). This year, their support from publicly revealed ballots was tracking at an identical 63.6 per cent.

Given it’s only their sixth year on the ballot, leaving four more years to get in, it’s clear Bonds and Clemens will be making Cooperstow­n speeches at some point.

Their support will continue to grow as the pool of media voters gets younger and younger, softening memories of the Steroids Era and weeding out older reporters who could never bring themselves to check off someone who might’ve doped. When that day comes, it will be surely be hotly debated. Some Hall of Famers will likely boycott the ceremony.

But let’s not forget: Bud Selig, the commission­er who presided over that shameful era with his head largely stuck in the sand, took his place in Cooperstow­n a year ago.

It’s time for Bonds and Clemens to join him.

 ?? AP PHOTOS ?? Former New York Yankees pitcher Roger Clemens, left, and former San Francisco Giants outfielder Barry Bonds will probably have to wait a little longer to get into the Baseball Hall of Fame.
AP PHOTOS Former New York Yankees pitcher Roger Clemens, left, and former San Francisco Giants outfielder Barry Bonds will probably have to wait a little longer to get into the Baseball Hall of Fame.

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