I spy the neon glow of self-appointed sports writer "saints" like Jeff Passan.
On June 18, a criminal trial jury handed down not-guilty
verdicts on six counts relating to Clemens’ alleged use of steroids. Already,
sportswriters such as Lew Carpenter, Jeff Passan, Wally Matthews, and Tom
Verducci have insinuated that they and their peers hold higher standards of
innocence than the jury. In their minds, Clemens’ name in the discredited
Mitchell report trumps the findings of the jury. In other words, they’re
prepared to play the modern-day Landis role and deny Clemens election to the Hall
of Fame. To this I reply, who died and made you guys Pharisees? By what objective standard can they deny him? To
mangle a phrase form the O. J. Simpson trial, if the jury acquits you must
elect.
Is Clemens worthy? Well, if 354 wins, 7 Cy Youngs, a MVP
award, an ERA of 3.12, election to the All-Century team, and 4,672 strikeouts
aren’t enough, nothing is. No one will ever get the warm fuzzies when they
think of Clemens, but the man’s practically a saint when compared to his chief
accuser, Brian (“The Juice”) McNamee. Besides, if being a nice person was a
criterion for the Hall of Fame, they could clear the joint and rent the space
to U-Haul. There is far less reason to deny Clemens than Shoeless Joe, who
actually admitted he took money from gamblers (though he didn’t throw the World
Series). The goods on Clemens are even shoddier than those attached to Pete
Rose (who should also be in the Hall of Fame).
It’s beyond risible that a group of sportswriters would set
itself up as moralists and judges. I double-checked; there are no baseball
writers–an aggregate known to contain quite a few substance abusers–who have
attained sainthood. If there are any former Eagle Scouts among them, they
outgrew those virtues long ago. Want to talk about being morally compromised?
Every sportscaster attached to an affiliated network swallows truth on an
everyday basis because he (or the occasional she) knows that being overly
critical will result in dismissal. Beat writers covering teams also follow
restraints, lest they be denied easy access to the players and other sources
necessary for them to file stories. Are we to believe, for instance, that no
New York sportswriter ever saw Mickey Mantle or Whitey Ford drunk? Would Jeff
Passan, in his Kansas City days, have written a slam piece on George Brett? Do
you expect the Boston press to spill the beans on how thoroughly unlikable Ted
Williams or Carl Yaztremski were? What passes for “tough” reporting is a shadow
of what is actually witnessed.
So spare me all that “integrity of the game” nonsense, and
stuff that “Clemens is a cheater” mantra. No–he’s not; a jury has ruled on
that. You may have your private suspicions, even your deep-seated certainties,
but there is no objective basis upon which Clemens can be denied entry into the
Hall of Fame. Maybe the dude did steroids; maybe he’s as pure as Snow White.
All we know for certain is that a lot of guys did use steroids between the 1980s and 2002. Most of them were
hitters. Only one pitcher, Clemens, won 354 games. Sounds like an even match to
me. Like it or not, a jury says that though his name appeared among the 47
steroid users listed in the Mitchell Report, Roger Clemens is an innocent man. The
Rocket must go to the Hall of Fame. To keep him out would be worse than
Shoeless Joe’s ban; it would be ideological- and innuendo-based persecution analogous
to McCarthyism.