Dayton Daily News

STANTON BRINGS BACK 61* DEBATE

So, who has the real HR record? Maris? Bonds? Answer often depends on who’s being asked.

- By Adam Kilgore Washington Post

Giancarlo Stanton climbed the visiting dugout stairs at and joined his Miami Marlins teammates in stretching lines, a mundane act turned extraordin­ary by the man performing it.

Stanton’s physique would make him look like a comic book hero if he was sorting the mail, and his recent feats have separated him from the planet’s other 7 billion occupants. Stanton stands out, and so as he emerged into view, a murmur spread in the seats behind the dugout.

“Giancarlo!” one fan hollered. “I’m rooting for you! Sixty-two! Sixty-two, man! You got it!”

In baseball, certain numbers evoke certain feelings. Sixty-two is one of those, which is complicate­d. Major League Baseball’s season home run record is not the 61 Roger Maris blasted in 1961. It is the 73 home runs Barry Bonds hit in 2001, one of those seasons when Bonds, through superhuman skill and inhuman chemistry, rearranged the game’s limits.

Stanton has forced the sport, for perhaps the first time in the current era, to grapple with the difference in those numbers. Stanton entered Sunday with 52 and about a month to go.

Stanton is the first slugger with a chance to top Maris’ total since 2006, when Ryan Howard had 56 with 21 games remaining. Stanton may have the best chance to slam 62 homers since baseball’s wholesale attempts to rid the sport of steroids and other performanc­e-enhancing drugs. He is starting to understand what means.

“I’m not going through that BS runaround again, like I had to last time,” Stanton said, when asked about the record.

In mid-August, a “SportsCent­er” anchor asked him on live television what number he viewed as a milestone for the season, and he said 62. The next day, reporters approached him and asked him to clarify. He said he believed 73 home runs was tainted as a record “considerin­g some things” and that 61 had “been the printed number” for years.

Last week, after his initial reticence, Stanton elaborated. “They both had an advantage either way,” he said. “Sixty-one was against one race. Seventy-three, 70, there could be controvers­y around that. They both had different advantages, in my view. So the record is the record. It doesn’t matter what anyone thinks.”

Stanton’s history is off — Babe Ruth hit 60 homers at a time when only whites were permitted, but Maris set his record after integratio­n. His larger point remains valid. The game changes through eras, and comparing accomplish­ments will always be fraught. Maris didn’t face Asian pitchers or specialize­d relievers or the volume of great Latin players in the game today.

The stain of steroid use heightens the noise, particular­ly because steroid use is a choice that separated some players from others. But performanc­e-enhancing drugs permeated the era — how many home runs did Bonds hit against pitchers who had gained their own advantage?

Sixteen years from now, those in the sport may look upon Stanton’s 2017 home run total and look askance at the allegedly juiced baseballs he walloped. That would be a different kind of asterisk than cheating peers by using performanc­e-enhancing drugs, but it may be an asterisk all the same.

In a sign of how complex the whole matter is, Stanton at once admits the blemish on Bonds’ record while receiving counsel from him. Bonds served as Miami’s hitting coach last season, and Stanton still exchanges text messages with him. Recently, Bonds has offered tips about to remain prepared as opponents pitch around him.

“Barry’s been huge for me,” Stanton said. “We talk all the time. He’s guided me along this year as well, helping me with questions (about the home run record), but on the field, too. He’s telling me, ‘Stay the course. Get ready to go every day.’”

A few lockers down, Ichiro Suzuki considered the question with the wisdom of a 43-year-old with 17 years in the majors, many during the Selig Era. The topic sparks endless discussion, but no definitive answer.

“A lot of people have different opinions,” Ichiro said. “I don’t think we’ll ever be able to say, ‘This is it,’ because there are so many opinions out there. This is how it’s going to be. That’s the reality of the situation.”

Jayson Werth’s grandfathe­r, Dick Schofield, played with Maris. As a small child, Werth recalled, Werth once attended Thanksgivi­ng dinner at Maris’ home. He understand­s how the nature of the record perpetuate­s the pull of 62, no matter how 73 may be viewed. Bonds has held the record, amid controvers­y, for 16 years. Mark McGwire held it with 70 for 12 years. Maris’ 61 stood for 37 years. The majority of fans, and even a large portion of today’s players, grew up with 61 homers ingrained as the standard.

“When you look over the course of baseball history, 61 was the number for a long time,” Werth said. “Until those guys did what they did, it wasn’t even fathomable, really. I kind of came up in that era. I played against Barry Bonds. I played against Sammy Sosa. I’ve seen what these guys can do, and I’ll tell you: They’re some of the most special, talented athletes that have ever played this game. I would not take anything away from those guys. But I do think that number — 61 — is significan­t and is quite a feat, regardless of what anyone else has done.”

Nationals manager Dusty Baker managed Bonds in 2001, and he maintains the proper record is 73. Those on Baker’s side hold the debate’s simplest and most powerful cudgel: It happened. Seventh-three times in 2001, Bonds hit a pitched ball over a fence, and whatever discomfort some feel about it now cannot reverse the past.

“Isn’t 73 the record?” Baker said. “I was there when he hit 73. So that’s the record to me. Boy, that was a lot of home runs.”

Baker, at least, took a side. Don Mattingly, Stanton’s manager and a player of significan­ce himself, declined to offer an opinion.

“Then we’re into guessing and confusing,” Mattingly said. “The record is — I don’t even know what the record is. Whatever the record is, the record is. Everyone else can figure out which one they think is legit or not.”

Consider, for a moment, a borderline Hall of Famer, one of the great hitters of the 1980s, professing with a straight face ignorance of the record for homers in a season. Bonds may hold the official record, but 73 does not resonate like 61.

 ?? ERIC ESPADA / GETTY IMAGES ?? Miami’s Giancarlo Stanton, circling the bases with his 50th home run, has a chance to surpass the 61-home run season mark that stood for decades — until it was eclipsed during what is now called the Steroid Era.
ERIC ESPADA / GETTY IMAGES Miami’s Giancarlo Stanton, circling the bases with his 50th home run, has a chance to surpass the 61-home run season mark that stood for decades — until it was eclipsed during what is now called the Steroid Era.
 ?? CARL JUSTE / MIAMI HERALD ?? Stanton, getting the whipped-cream treatment after his 50th, has tried to stay diplomatic during the debate — especially since Barry Bonds is his former coach.
CARL JUSTE / MIAMI HERALD Stanton, getting the whipped-cream treatment after his 50th, has tried to stay diplomatic during the debate — especially since Barry Bonds is his former coach.

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