bad news for baseball

This is the biggest load of shit. They will find nothing. All the need to do is release the tainted urine samples, but baseball refuses to release the samples they collected from these players two years ago and back, because they know these guys tested positive and they claim since it ws before 2003 they don't apply... BULL SHIT. They just can't face the public scrutiny when it gets out they knew..... They are using some right to privacy bullshit to protect their image.

If baseball was serious about this they'd get John Dowd involved and hand over those samples but they won't cause Dowd no take shit from anyone including the jackass commissioner.
 
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Can you believe this guy?

BALCO Founder Denies Giving Bonds Steroids
By DAN GOODIN


SAN MATEO, Calif. (AP) - BALCO founder Victor Conte insisted Thursday that he never gave performance-enhancing drugs to Barry Bonds and that a new book that makes those claims is ``full of outright lies.''

Conte spoke to The Associated Press outside his San Mateo home hours after his release from prison, where he spent four months after pleading guilty to orchestrating an illegal steroids distribution scheme that allegedly involved many high-profile athletes, including Bonds.

Asked whether he gave Bonds performance-enhancing drugs, Conte said: ``No, I did not.''

A new book, ``Game of Shadows,'' by two San Francisco Chronicle reporters, chronicles the founding of the Bay Area Laboratory Co-Operative and details alleged extensive steroid use by Bonds and other baseball stars. Baseball Commissioner Bud Selig announced Thursday that former Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell will lead an investigation into the claims.

``I plan to provide evidence in the near future to prove that much of what is written in the book is untrue,'' Conte told the AP. He declined to list specific inaccuracies or what evidence he would provide, but said the book is ``about the character assassination of Barry Bonds and myself.''

``It's my opinion that the two writers of the book have a disease called fabrication-itis,'' Conte said, holding a copy of ``Game of Shadows'' as he stood on his front steps.

The book's authors, Lance Williams and Mark Fainaru-Wada, were on an airplane Thursday and not available for comment.

Lisa Johnson, a spokeswoman for Gotham Books, which published ``Game of Shadows,'' said: ``Gotham Books stands by Lance Williams and Mark Fainaru-Wada, and we stand by their research.''

``We stand by the reporting that Mark and Lance did throughout this story and in all the stories that were published in the paper,'' Chronicle executive vice president and editor Phil Bronstein said. ``And if and when Mr. Conte speaks further about this, I'm sure we'll report about that as well.''

Conte was picked up by his family after his 5:30 a.m. release from Taft Correctional Institution, about 40 miles southwest of Bakersfield, according to spokeswoman Mandy Ruff.

About five hours later, Conte arrived at his green two-story house in San Mateo, about 20 miles south of San Francisco, in a white sports utility vehicle with darkened windows.

Wearing blue jeans, a red sweat shirt and a baseball cap, Conte said ``it feels great'' to be out of prison. He said prison was ``like a men's retreat,'' during which he read, gave music lessons to fellow inmates, coached a sprinting team and participated in a debate about steroids.

Conte founded and managed the Burlingame-based BALCO, where the steroids were sold. He pleaded guilty to money laundering and a steroid distribution charge, and dozens of other charges were dropped as part of his plea deal.

Conte was sentenced in October to four months in prison and four months' home confinement in a plea deal with federal prosecutors.

Baseball investigators could seek to interview Conte about steroid use in the game.

Bonds, who has denied using steroids, was the most prominent athlete linked to BALCO. He testified in December 2003 to the federal grand jury investigating the case but has not been charged with a crime.

Greg Anderson, Bonds' personal trainer, was sentenced to three months behind bars and an additional three months of home confinement after pleading guilty to money laundering and a steroid distribution charge.
 
SlickWilly said:
All cosmetic. You think they're going to suspend Bonds after he hits number 756 and then take the record away from him? MLB just wants this whole matter to disappear.
If Selig isn't the biggest fucking pussy in the world, then he will.
 
Just read the fourth paragraph of this article and you'll see that they won't do anything to Bonds or other steroids users.


Baseball Average Salary Closes in on $3M

NEW YORK (AP) - Baseball's average salary soared 9 percent this year to nearly $2.9 million, with Alex Rodriguez topping a sport in which more than half the players on opening-day rosters make $1 million or more.

Rodriguez headed the list at $25.7 million and was No. 1 for the sixth straight year, according to a study of major league contracts by The Associated Press. He was followed by New York Yankees teammates Derek Jeter ($20.6 million) and Jason Giambi ($20.4 million).

San Francisco's Barry Bonds was fourth at $20 million, and Houston's Jeff Bagwell - who might not play because of a shoulder injury - was next at $19.3 million.

``Baseball had record crowds last year,'' Giambi said. ``Probably with Barry going to break the (home run) record, it will bump it up and more people will come out and watch it. That makes players more popular, and in turn guys make more money.''

This year's record $2,866,544 average was up 8.9 percent from last year's figure of $2,632,655.

The Yankees' payroll dropped a bit to $198.7 million from $205.9 million on opening day last year. Boston was second again at $120.1 million, followed by the Los Angeles Angels ($103.6 million), the World Series champion Chicago White Sox ($102.9 million) and the New York Mets ($100.9 million).

Payroll figures don't include cash transactions, such as money the Yankees are receiving from Texas for Rodriguez and the White Sox are getting from Philadelphia for Jim Thome.

At the other end were the Florida Marlins at just under $15 million, including 17 players making the $327,000 minimum. It's the lowest figure for any team at the start of a season since Pittsburgh and Montreal in 1998. It's also less than the top 12 players make and 1/13th of what the Yankees pay their roster.

While the biggest spenders kept their payrolls pretty much at the same levels as last year, many teams at the bottom made boosts. Toronto added free-agent pitchers A.J. Burnett and B.J. Ryan, and catcher Bengie Molina, among others, hiking its payroll to $71.9 million from $45.4 million.

Eleven of the bottom 15 teams increased spending. Baseball's labor contract expires Dec. 19, and the sport's economic system will be negotiated again by players and owners.

``There are still concerns at both the top and the bottom,'' said Bob DuPuy, baseball's chief operating officer. ``The goal would be to get a tighter range that would ensure that even more than 20 clubs at Labor Day still have a chance to compete for playoff spots, that playoff spots are based on skill and talent and blossoming stars and not just on plugging holes with economics.''

Oakland, 21st at $62.3 million, still has little margin for error. Some of the high-spending clubs, such as the Yankees, complain that the smaller-market franchises haven't spent their revenue-sharing money on major league payrolls.
 
San Francisco's Barry Bonds was fourth at $20 million, and Houston's Jeff Bagwell - who might not play because of a shoulder injury - was next at $19.3 million.


You mean that. Are you joking?? The owners would love it if they found him to use steroids. It voids his contract and he won't get another cent. Why do you think the Yankees last year were talking with lawyers about Giambi?? To void the rest of his contract and maybe even sue him to for the money they paid him already. The Yankees and Giants would love to have another 20 million to spend.
 
Daddycool said:
You mean that. Are you joking?? The owners would love it if they found him to use steroids. It voids his contract and he won't get another cent. Why do you think the Yankees last year were talking with lawyers about Giambi?? To void the rest of his contract and maybe even sue him to for the money they paid him already. The Yankees and Giants would love to have another 20 million to spend.
Your right DC...they would love to get the money back ......and don"t
give a shit about the integrity of baseball's records.


pretty pathetic, huh??
 
Baseball is a business and if steroids never came up, the owners would be paying these guys the big buck to hit the ball out of the park. But now, steroids is an evil thing and the owners are doing a 180 and are looking to void all those contracts they gave out"knowing the players juiced".

Baseball is a business bottom line and nobody cares about the integrity of the game. Not the players, owners or managers. Only the fans care.
 
biglarry1 said:
``Baseball had record crowds last year,'' Giambi said. ``Probably with Barry going to break the (home run) record, it will bump it up and more people will come out and watch it. That makes players more popular, and in turn guys make more money.''

As long as the fans continue to come out in record numbers,nothing will be done.
 
And when I tell people I've not paid to go to one baseball game since the great strike (and I only attended ONE playoff game)... People like Kimmie tell me I;m foolish.

btw... I used to go to 20-30 games a year bet the Yanks and Mets.
 
btw... One of the major side effects of long term roid use is "joint" problems.

Shoulders, knees, backs, hips etc...... Bonds, Mac, Sosa, Bagwell, Giambi.... all had these health issues.
 
Ozzy said:
btw... One of the major side effects of long term roid use is "joint" problems.

Shoulders, knees, backs, hips etc...... Bonds, Mac, Sosa, Bagwell, Giambi.... all had these health issues.

Giambi got a tumor from it but no one will verify that.
 
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