Skip to main content

Mitchell Report Thoughts

Alright. I read the whole summary and the section where the players implicated by Kirk Radomski are enumerated. Here is my take:

I think Sen. Mitchell should be commended for doing such an even handed job in the report. It seems clear he collected a preponderance of evidence before releasing any names, and gave all of the accused a chance to tell their side of the story...if they had one.

It also becomes clear that the players from the start have been stonewalling, and not just in the sense of trying to keep illegal activities from coming to light. The players or, maybe more accurately, the Players Association have attempted to obfuscate and wrongdoing to the point that they no longer care of the integrity of the game is at stake.

For example:


  1. Of the 500 former players the Mitchell investigation attempted to interview, only 68 agreed to do so. That is 13.6%.

  2. The Players Association refused to supply any documentation on any matter whatsoever.

  3. They refused to make chief operating officer Gene Orza available to be interviewed. (Something to hide one has to presume.)

  4. They refused full access to the director of the current drug testing program.

  5. They sent memos "discouraging" players from cooperating with the investigation.

  6. They refused to respond to any of the specific allegations.




The report goes over all of the information on various drug related matters that have come out over the years, but there were still many things I had never heard before. For example, despite what I have heard and read numerous times, it turns out that MLB had banned all prescription drugs obtained without a valid prescription in 1971. So, while steroids were only banned by name in 1991, their use under the prior policy would have been against the rules of baseball as well.

The report seems to indicate that Gene Orza has been working to undermine the existing testing program by deliberating dragging out the mandated notification process for testing so that players could have the drugs cleared from their system by the time, several months later, when tests were actually adminstered. Mitchell is right that the oversight for the testing program should be removed from the control of the players and the owners and entrusted to an independent body. The incentives are too great for the players to "game" the system.

Of the players whose drug involvement was already open news in the press (Barry Bonds, Jason Giambi, Jeremey Giambi, Armando Rios, Gary Sheffield, Benito Santiago, Marvin Bernard, Randy Velarde and Bobby Estalella) the only thing new I learned was that Estalella was taking the female fertility drug Clomid.

I don't think I wanted to know that.

Of the new(ish) names that have come to light because of the Radomski information, a lot of them are/were marginal major leaguers. You can understand the pressure they must have felt to try to hold onto or gain a spot on the 40 man roster. It's hard to get too pissed off about those guys. The big names?? Well, its hard not to want to spit at them.

The list: (Click here for Baseball-References links to all the players mentioned in the report.)


  1. Lenny Dykstra - Long rumored, now looking like a slam dunk.

  2. David Segui

  3. Larry Bigbie - Bigbie did say that members of the Cards clubhouse could hook him up with more drugs if he wanted them. That's real encouraging.

  4. Brian Roberts - This hurts. I always admired Roberts' game.

  5. Jack Cust - So much for that "breakout" season?

  6. Tim Laker

  7. Josias Manzanillo

  8. Todd Hundley

  9. Mark Carreon

  10. Hal Morris

  11. Matt Franco

  12. Rondell White - No wonder he breaks down whenever anyone looks at him.

  13. Roger Clemons - The biggest name and the proof that the steroids investigations are not just the "man" trying to keep Barry Bonds down.

  14. Andy Pettite - The biggest surprise to me.

  15. Chuck Knoblauch - You would have thought he would have focused more on the whole "throwing from second base to first base" problem first.

  16. Jason Grimsley

  17. Gregg Zaun

  18. David Justice - Didn't his career seem to just pop like an over-inflated balloon?

  19. F.P. Santangello

  20. Glenallen Hill

  21. Mo Vaughn - Didn't his career seem to just pop like an over-inflated balloon?

  22. Denny Neagle - Really?

  23. Ron Villone

  24. Ryan Franklin - Oops.

  25. Chris Donnels

  26. Todd Williams

  27. Phil Hiatt

  28. Todd Pratt

  29. Kevin Young

  30. Mike Lansing

  31. Cody McKay - Oops again.

  32. Kent Mercker

  33. Adam Piatt

  34. Miguel Tejada - Enjoy Houston. Enjoy.

  35. Jason Christiansen

  36. Mike Stanton

  37. Stephan Randolph

  38. Jerry Hairston, Jr.

  39. Paul Lo Duca - Too bad. Such an enjoyable player to watch.

  40. Adam Riggs

  41. Bart Miadich - Never heard of him.

  42. Fernando Vina - Will ESPN return his calls? Or will he wind up with Harold Reynolds in Baseball Tonight purgatory?

  43. Kevin Brown - He should ask for a refund.

  44. Eric Gagne - A theme is delevoping.

  45. Mike Bell

  46. Matt Herges

  47. Gary Bennett, Jr. - One more and we've hit the Cardinals backup catcher trifecta.

  48. Jim Parque

  49. Brendan Donnelly

  50. Chad Allen

  51. Jeff Williams

  52. Howie Clark

  53. Exavier "Nook" Logan - Always liked Nook. Damn.

The other thing I take from this report is the obvious pressure that the Player's Association has been putting on current and former players alike to keep their mouths shut. This makes the performace of Mark McGwire and Sammy Sosa before Congress more understandable. Not anymore right, but more understandable. I wonder if the media that has spent so much time crucifying McGwire and Sosa will visit the same venom on all the big names in the list above? Clemons and Pettite will face a shit-storm just because they are Yankees, but there are others.


I also wonder if all the pious sportwriters who claimed they could never vote for Rafael Palmeiro for the Hall of Fame will hold the Rocket to the same standard. We will see.


This is a awful day for baseball; an awful and absolutely necessary day.

Comments

Southlandish said…
The Palmeiro question is spot on. It brings no end of joy to my heart to know that Clemens not only didn't get his ring until joining a loaded Yankees team but that he was juiced as well.
Rich Horton said…
Too bad he wasn't pitching for the Sox in 2004...that could have helped ease the old wounds.

Popular posts from this blog

Early Thoughts on City 2025

There are few things harder to keep track of than an MLS side in their off-season, at least for me. Despite the fact it takes place roughly during the time the MLB Hot Stove season is in full swing, it is nowhere near as easy to follow along with as baseball. Part of it is how disconnected MLS is with the international soccer calendar. St. Louis City SC is still digesting the moves it made last summer even though those players have already played important games for the club. It is all weird and disjointed, and I always feel like I am playing catch-up. Happily, the moves made in the off-season this year were not numerous.  German Timo Baumgartl comes over from Europe as an option at center back, which is good because that was a position that was a little rocky for City last season. Given his own troubles over the last few seasons (cancer and uneven play in the aftermath of that), a spell with City can give Baumgartl a chance to have a re-set. Given his pedigree and the fact City si...

Blues Fall Off a Cliff

 Hockey seasons will have their ups and downs. For whatever reason, be it injuries, a challenging schedule, an inexplicable loss of form, it is difficult for teams to maintain a good level of compete for an entire season. The good teams just limit their funks. The St. Louis Blues, however, are not a good team. They are a poor team, and poor teams sink under the weight of "here we go again" night after night.  I will admit I only watched the first two periods of last night's 5-0 loss to a Colorado team that had been scuffling of late. Two periods were more than enough to get the gist of it. It was also enough to lead me to a diagnosis as to what ails the team. It isn't that they are young and are going through growing pains. No, the reason the Blues are so bad is that the veterans who are being paid to be the backbone of this team are not doing their jobs. I'm talking about Schenn, Buchnevich, Faulk, and even Binnington and Parayko. Over $30M of the salary cap is b...

My Life Amongst the Moguls

 It maybe trendy YOLO nonsense, but as I get older I have taken to "experiences" more than I used to in the past. Do not get me wrong, I still love stuff, and I am not unaware that having cash at my disposal opens up the range of possible experiences. However, I must say my mood is often "I'll try anything once," as often as not.  To that end I recently became a part owner in three racehorses. Through the website MyRaceHorse.com I have purchased ownership shares in three horses, 1 share each in an as yet unnamed colt and unnamed filly, and 2 shares in a colt named Munny Problem.  All of these horses are 2-year-olds who are just beginning their lives as potential racehorses. I say potential because there is no guarantee any of them will ever make it to the starting gate of an official race. The race game is a tough one and plenty of well-bred horses don't make the cut for various reasons; they can get injured, they don't take to the training, they turn ou...