neurosisxeno
Member
This is why I never really understood the debate about steroids in baseball. Yea, it will add 50 feet to your hit, but just hitting the god damn ball is the hard part. Why does whether or not a handful of guys hit 5-10 extra home runs a season going to break the entire game? You don't think when guys like Conseco or Maguire were mashing the ball there weren't literally HUNDREDS of minor leaguers juicing that nobody gave a crap about because they couldn't hit crap?
Lets put this in context; Barry Bonds. The guy was a career .298 hitter--which is pretty good considering the league average in those days was about .260-.270--and even before he started breaking records was regularly hitting 30-40 HR's a season. During the 90's his average was just over .300 a season, which is really good. Now you might be thinking "maybe more strength increases swing speed and made him hit better", but the funny thing is Bonds didn't start juicing until 1998. He had already had 3 MVP seasons, 8 Silver Slugger awards, 7 Golden Gloves, and 7 Allstar appearances.
The point I'm trying to make is, alright yea, Steroids helped Barry Bonds break the single season home run record. But he was already a future hall of famer, who was an amazing baseball player. There were probably thousands of players over that time frame in the MLB who get no notoriety because they just weren't very good compared to him. So personally, if he athletes want to get all jacked up on steroids to on average hit 5-10 more HR's that would just be fly outs, I say let them. If you can go out there and hit .300 or .320 a season, you're going to be successful no matter what. I mean shit, 41 year old Ichiro is batting like .410 right now--in the pitching dominant National League at that.
Lets put this in context; Barry Bonds. The guy was a career .298 hitter--which is pretty good considering the league average in those days was about .260-.270--and even before he started breaking records was regularly hitting 30-40 HR's a season. During the 90's his average was just over .300 a season, which is really good. Now you might be thinking "maybe more strength increases swing speed and made him hit better", but the funny thing is Bonds didn't start juicing until 1998. He had already had 3 MVP seasons, 8 Silver Slugger awards, 7 Golden Gloves, and 7 Allstar appearances.
The point I'm trying to make is, alright yea, Steroids helped Barry Bonds break the single season home run record. But he was already a future hall of famer, who was an amazing baseball player. There were probably thousands of players over that time frame in the MLB who get no notoriety because they just weren't very good compared to him. So personally, if he athletes want to get all jacked up on steroids to on average hit 5-10 more HR's that would just be fly outs, I say let them. If you can go out there and hit .300 or .320 a season, you're going to be successful no matter what. I mean shit, 41 year old Ichiro is batting like .410 right now--in the pitching dominant National League at that.