Steroid Users Have No Place in Hall of Fame
Jim Bunning
Baseball Great Jim Bunning: Genuine baseball stars feel cheated by enhanced stats. Besides, the kids are watching.
Hall of Famer
Being elected to the
There are more than 200 former
During my 17 years as a professional ballplayer, I had no personal experience with steroids. But I did know of ballplayers who sharpened their spikes, corked their bats, and even scuffed some balls.
They all broke the rules, and when they were caught they were punished.
The same goes for today's players who in some cases have abused drugs to enhance their performance.
There is also a great sense of responsibility that comes with being a member of the Hall of Fame.
Whether major league players like it or not, they serve as role models to our nation's youth, who look up to them and want to one day be like them. If players who cheat to gain entrance into baseball's most elite club are given a free pass, it sends a terrible message to our nation's young athletes that it is OK to cheat. I don't think that's right.
When I was a kid, I was taught that if you really wanted something in life you had to work hard to get it. There are no shortcuts in life.
But kids see home runs blasted like cannons and they want to feel that thrill and accomplish that feat for themselves. So they emulate these professional athletes any way they can. The competition in junior high and high school sports is tough and too many kids take the route of the needle and pill to get any edge they can over their opponents.
Steroids have been illegal in
Over the last four years,
Until there is a test for it, I believe that there will always be players who try to cheat the system.
I think many of today's players do not understand that many others came before them, and even more will come after them. And all baseball players past and present have an obligation to protect the integrity of the greatest game ever invented.
If there is no integrity, then there is no game.
When I played ball with
There is no place for cheaters in the Hall of Fame.
Baseball Hall of Fame Should Get Over Steroid Scandal
Steve Lyons
Are you sick of the steroid scandal in baseball yet? I am! And I really believe the only reason anybody cares about it at all is because the media told us to. Don't get me wrong! Steroids are now, and will continue to be, a black eye in sports, but this could have been handled and tested for in a far less public way in baseball
Steroid Era No Surprise, Hall of Fame Voters Should Accept It
David Ezra
Like it or not, baseball changes. Smaller strike zones, livelier baseballs, smaller stadiums, harder and lighter maple bats, "body armor" allowing hitters to fearlessly attack the ball, and so on. That's why stat guru Bill James has said steroids may have had minimal impact on home run totals.
Steroids Debate Not About Bonds or A-Rod, About Right and Wrong
Marc Ecko
Baseball, for better or worse, has always been a mirror to American culture at large. The unapologetic metaphor for our glory days, as well as our pockmarks. Baseball is 100 percent American Pop Culture. I found the hoopla surrounding Bonds's record-shattering career and the debate over its validity to be a curious one, loaded with hypocrisy and rich with emotion ...
(c) 2009 U.S. News & World Report
