Thursday, August 16, 2007

Why Bud Selig Is An Unequivocal Joke

When viewed with the context of Roger Goodell's handling of the Michael Vick fiasco, and to a lesser extent, David Stern's handling of the Tim Donaghy nightmare, it is now unmistakably clear that Bud Selig is the worst commissioner in pro sports. Selig announced today he feels it is "unnecessary to take further action" against Jason Giambi, an admitted steroids-user. Way to show baseball fans around the globe you're taking this issue seriously, Bud.

The fact that Giambi cooperated with steroids investigator Sen
ator George Mitchell, coupled with two charitable donations he plans to make totaling $100,000 (which is four-tenths of one percent of his 2007 salary, or roughly $256 to someone who earns $60,000 a year) is evidence he's learned his lesson, according to our commissioner, whose tough talk about restoring the integrity of the game was clearly just that.

What sort of message does this send to the millions of fans who want answers about players like Giambi, Barry Bonds, Mark McGwire, and pretty much anybody who put up career numbers in the late 90s and early 00s, only to return to Earth shortly afterward?

And furthermore,
does a drug user (let's not forget, that's what steroids are) escape the legal system unscathed if he cooperates with detectives and makes a small charitable donation? No. He or she has to pay the penalty, which in some cases, involves jail time. Can somebody please explain to my why this is any different?

Giambi shouldn't get jail time, but he should have been punished the same way any other steroid-user gets punished nowadays: 50 games for a first offense under the new policy adopted in November of 2005. Admitted use, while more admirable, should be no different than "getting caught" via a positive test. And it's worth noting Giambi only "admitted" using steroids and HGH to a grand jury. He's issued a few vague apologizes and has urged baseball to do the same, but has never said exactly what he's apologizing for.

The true crime in all of this is that it sets a precedent of complete and utter amnesty for anyone else implicated in the Mitchell investigation. Let's say Mitchell has the goods on Barry Bonds, has it right now and is ready to release it tomorrow. Selig has no way of disciplining Bonds any differently than he did Giambi, provided Bonds is willing to make a meager donation. He could potentially get him on the, "Giambi cooperated, you didn't" technicality, but that difference alone wouldn't justify something as serious (and appropriate) as a lengthy suspension, asterisks, or a ban. People would cry racism. And they might be right.

The bottom line is this. Bud Selig had his chance. He had his chance to prove that this Mitchell investigation, which has been somewhat loosely defined and ambiguous to begin with, actually meant something. Unfortunately for baseball and its fans, it does not.

1 comment:

Unknown said...

well, um, you can't be compelled to testify against yourself in this country. So since we have no proof that Giambi did steroids (other than his own admissions), how exactly can Selig suspend him?

Goodell has the benefit of having the NFL players' union under his thumb. The union agreed to the conduct policy that has Pacman and Tank and Henry suspended. The MLBPA has yet to agree to allow the players to be suspended for possibly maybe having used steroids. So I'm not sure how Selig would suspend him.

I guess Selig could just go ahead and suspend him, CBA be damned. Giambi would appeal, win, and then where are we? Back to a point where the players don't trust the owners, and we're at labor war again. Sorry, but I much prefer steroid-infested baseball to no baseball at all. Remember how much fun that was?

And remind me again why David Stern's handling for the Donaghy thing has been good? "I'm so horrified. This is the worst thing that's happened to the NBA since I've been a fan, lawyer or commissioner." Well, thank you for admitting that. I'll give hima gold star when he fixes the problem that the terrible officiating. Keep in mind that Donaghy was able to get away with his shenanigans because the officiating is generally terrible, so you can't tell if a guy is throwing a game or just generally incompetent.