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Dave Zirin: The Mitchell Report: Absolving the Owners

A BUZZFLASH GUEST CONTRIBUTION
by Dave Zirin

Ever had someone spit in your face and tell you it's raining? That's how it felt watching former Sen. George Mitchell's press conference on steroid use in Major League Baseball. The former Senate Majority Leader unleashed his "investigative findings" speaking with the somber, deliberate tones of an exhausted undertaker. Mitchell strained to convey scorn upon both baseball owners and the union for being "slow to act." Yet beneath the surface, his report is ugly sanctimonious fraud, meant to absolve those at the top and pin blame on a motley crew of retired players, trainers, and clubhouse attendants. This is truly the old saw of the magical fishing net that captures minnows but lets the whales swim free.

Sanctioned by Commissioner Bud Selig's office, the Mitchell Report was seen by some as an unprecedented act in sports: a 20 million dollar internal investigation aimed at rooting out "performance enhancing drugs and human growth hormones" in the game.

The Mitchell Report certainly contains a great deal of sexy sizzle. First and foremost, it names names: including MVPs Mo Vaughn, Miguel Tejada and Barry Bonds as well as former All Stars like Eric Gagne and Lenny Dykstra. It also names a man being called the Moby Dick to Mitchell's Ahab: seven time Cy Young award winner Roger Clemens. For some time, people in the game have whispered about Clemens being on the juice. And for some time, the 45-year-old Clemens denied all charges, as a compliant media lapped it up. As Yahoo Sports' Dan Wetzel wrote,

"Year after year he peddled the same garbage, Roger Clemens was so dominant for so long because he simply outworked everyone. It played to the nation's Puritan roots, made Clemens out to be this everyman maximizing his skills through singular focus, dedication and a commitment to drinking carrot juice, or something. It's all gone now, the legend of Rocket Roger dead on arrival of the Mitchell Report; one of the greatest pitchers of all time, his seven Cy Young's and 354 career victories lost to history under a pile of lies and syringes."

The Mitchell Report confirms not only suspicions about Clemens, but also the existence of an outrageous media bias and double standard. While seven time MVP Barry Bonds was raked over the conjecture-coals for years, Clemens got a pass. Two players, both dominant into their 40s, one black and one white, with two entirely different ways of being treated. It doesn't take Al Sharpton to do the cultural calculus.

And yet, flaying Clemens shouldn't excuse the gross whitewash at work.

There are three fundamental problems with the Mitchell report:

1 - Mitchell himself. George Mitchell, the former Senate Majority leader best known before today for helping negotiate the peace deal in Northern Ireland, has had a massive conflict of interest when it comes to baseball. The man is on the boards of both the Boston Red Sox and also the Walt Disney Company. The Disney Company owns ESPN, baseball's number one broadcast partner. Joe Morgan has spoken out about how in the 1990s, ESPN execs encouraged him not to state his suspicions about steroid use on-air. As Morgan said, "I would be broadcasting a game and there would be players hitting balls in a way that they had no business hitting them."

2 - No testimony from players. The only active player to speak to Mitchell was New York Yankee Jason Giambi, and he spoke under threat of suspension. Mitchell says he invited the accused to come clear their names, but no one took him up on this generous offer. Yet if you are a MLB player, why would you come forward to legitimize a process in which you wouldn't even have the opportunity to face your accuser? This is a process where Mitchell was judge, jury, and executioner: Gitmo meets Skoal. Reputations have been ruined -- and the essential "truth" of the report is still based on hearsay.

3 - Same old narrative. Mitchell paid lip service in his press conference to "slow acting" owners -- calling it "a collective failure." At one point, Mitchell said -- without explanation -- that baseball execs were slow due to "economic motives." Yet the overarching narrative is that the owners and general managers were merely ignorant or obtuse, with a complete absence of malice. The real fault lay with players and independent acting clubhouse attendants, like the soon to be famous Mets worker Kirk Radomski, who says he secured the juice for players and named names. Radomski was described by former Mets GM Steve Phillips as "the guy who would pick up the towels or pick up a player's girlfriend from the airport." Yes, Kirk Radomski, a regular Pablo Escobar.

Mitchell went on to say that players have actively and on their own made great efforts to foil the owners' poorly organized efforts to clean up the game. This is the same kind of political cover -- as Naomi Klein has written so brilliantly -- that the mainstream press gives the Bush administration on Iraq. Errors made are ones of people with good intentions who made terrible choices. Those who suffered from these choices are blamed for their barbarism and self-interest. When Baghdad was looted and destroyed, Iraqis were pilloried for their greed. Rumsfeld, Bush, and Cheney were blamed for being "overly optimistic" and "trusting them too much."

This is poppycock, whether we're talking about the Bush cabal, or Major League owners. Performance enhancing drugs were funneled into the game along with smaller stadiums, harder bats, and incredible shrinking strike zones to boost power numbers and ratings after the 1994 strike. (Read Howard Bryant's excellent Juicing the Game for the full break down.)

The idea that owners and GMs facilitated these measures while leaving the very conditioning of players to themselves simply strains belief: This is George HW Bush saying he was "out of the loop" on Iran-Contra. This is Dubya saying, "I never read" the National Intelligence Estimate before claiming World War III is on the horizon. In other words, this is the way people in power stay in power during times of crisis: Take some heat, blame the underlings, cry some tears, and call it a day.

[Dave Zirin is the author of the new book "Welcome to the Terrordome:" with an intro by Chuck D (Haymarket). You can receive his column Edge of Sports, every week by going to http://zirin.com/edgeofsports/?p=subscribe&id=1. Contact him at edgeofsports@gmail.com]

A BUZZFLASH GUEST CONTRIBUTION


Baseball isn't a sport any longer

I'm from NYC and the Yanks were the best team money could buy - for a looong time. But, you could discount the fact that it was money that bought the best players. Now, we don't know if they are gifted or juiced. This is a game of statistics - and all of it is for naught when anabolic steroids change the performance profile of players. That's not a game - that's a competition based upon who has the best endocrinologist. Will future programs feature the hormone cocktail du jour and th

Let this miserable excuse for entertainment go. It is dead. Bereft of life. It is no more. This is an ex-game.

"In the part of this universe that we know there is great injustice, and often the good suffer, and often the wicked prosper, and one hardly knows which of those is the more annoying."
- Bertrand Russell -

Bonds V. Clemens

Most of what you say is right on target but the comparison of Bonds being "hounded" over the past few years while Clemens has not overlooks the fact that Bonds is one of the few players to have admitted using steroids on the record. He owned up to using the clear and the cream in his Grand Jury testimony. And even though he said his use was unwitting, the mere fact that he was an admitted user put him in a different category of suspicion than Clemens.

There comes a time to end the whole mess

This makes the "Black Sox" scandal look tame. http://www.chicagohs.org/history/blacksox.html

There are no innocents - the owners who made money - the steroid users cheated and their team mates, team physicians and the fans who tolerated, and even applauded the results of the abuse... all are equally to blame.

It won't happen, but a fitting solution would be to close down all professional baseball - lock the stadiums and let them fall to ruin (the stadiums are owned by municipalities - just vote to raise the rent to $10 billion a year). A fitting end to a corrupted "national pastime:" close down the professional part of the sport. Let the kids, HS and college players play and end organized ball there.

Maybe 20 or 30 years down the road we can revisit pro ball - but it comes as no surprise that GWB had his hands in the game and look where we wound up.

Baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn would never have permitted this.

"His tenure was marked by labor strikes (most notably in 1981), owner disenchantment, and the end of baseball's reserve clause, yet baseball enjoyed unprecedented attendance gains (from 23 million in 1968 to 45.5 million in 1983) and television contracts during the same time frame.
Kuhn suspended numerous players for involvement with drugs and gambling, and took a strong stance against any activity that he perceived to be 'not in the best interests of baseball."'
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bowie_Kuhn

"In the part of this universe that we know there is great injustice, and often the good suffer, and often the wicked prosper, and one hardly knows which of those is the more annoying."
- Bertrand Russell -

Roger Clemens

Clemens is the poster boy for why steroids are good. This guy is arguably the greatest pitcher of all time and has been able to maintain a level of excellency far past most players' primes. He has also suffered considerably less injuries than most of his counterparts. The performances of Clemens and Bonds leaves me seriously questioning the media's negative portrayal of steroids. I now view steroid use, not abuse, the same way I view pot... which is everything the media tells you about it is crap.

The issue of records is also complete junk. Babe Ruth didn't face any black pitchers, or latino for that matter. Medical and surgical advancments render the comaparison of eras irrelevant. Steroid use is no bigger a factor than anything else, I estimate it is actually less of a factor than many things.