PEDs and the damage done

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But that wasn’t enough. His head grew, thanks to his special tonic, and he hit 411 more homers, including those 73 in 2001.

I focus on those two, because they are at the heart of this discussion. They deserved the Hall of Fame before the record-setting numbers. Baseball fans deserved to celebrate them – even if they both were already known as jerks off the field. 

They both should have known better.

Clemens is a self-proclaimed baseball-history nut with a deep respect for pitchers of yore.

Bonds is the son of a great slugger (Bobby Bonds) and the godson of maybe the best ever in Willie Mays.

Baseball, above all else, is about the numbers.

They knew that. Better than Sammy Sosa, who loved making funny faces every time the red light went on in the dugout camera. See, Sosa will never understand why it meant something to a guy like me to see a Cub pass Ernie Banks club record for homers. 

The Banks that my father, my uncle and my grandfather followed faithfully and marked down in their memories as the best to play at Clark and Sheffield. 

The guy that passed Banks should have held the same spot in my mind. 

Bonds and Clemens understood that. 

Better than Rafael Palmeiro or Jeff Bagwell or Alex Rodriguez and so on. Those other guys saw a chance to cash in, and they did. They wouldn’t have gotten to legend status without those PEDs. 

Bonds and Clemens would have. The mold for their busts was already on order. 

They did it because they understood what those numbers meant. They wanted more than anything to be the ones to best those marks. To hold that place in the hearts of baseball faithful the world over. 

They would do anything to get there, including, apparently, lie about it the rest of their lives despite evidence to the contrary. 

And by doing it with a pill or a needle, they killed those numbers we all cared about well before they ever passed them.

So Paul Lo Duca, PEDs didn’t make those two legends. PEDs kept them from becoming such.  

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