Thursday, September 01, 2005

Injury prone issues

Trying to be a main contender in baseball, especially coming down the stretch in September for a shot at the playoffs is daunting when top players go down with injury. I'm not talking about once or twice either, more like a string of years in row. This happened with stars like Mike Piazza, Nomar Garciapara, and Ken Griffey Jr.(actually healthy and having a old Grif-like season. Glad to see this). Injuries occur sometimes and are understandable to a certain extent. However, when players rehabilitate and return to their normal condition then get injuried over and over after running to first base trying to leg out a infield hit, breaking their spleen, colliding with another teammate in the outfield due to poor communication, bending over to tie their shoes(Juan Gonzalez),and getting severe back spasms by sneezing too hard(Sammy Sosa). Oh come on, this is pathetic. Players ought to be in better physical shape than that. In the old eras of the game guys would get spiked in the leg while playing on the infield, have blood spurt out for hours and still finish the game. Stopping the bleeding was a sign of weakness and meant you were a pansy. Ty Cobb would be the first to tell you so.

New rules and regulations need to be enforced in baseball to limit this frequent injury problem. When a player gets injuried in 2 or more consecutive seasons their pay should be docked by 40%, lose bonuses in their contract, and be forced to publicly hand out refunds to fans who buy tickets while apologizing for another crummy season. If this doesn't serve the best effect, players will either serve a indefinite suspension or be stuck out in front of the ball park everyday tied to a chair while being pelted with insults and foreign objects from enraged, fed up fans. This method is a bit extreme, but it will have one hell of an impact on players' avoiding injuries in the future.

1 comment:

Sports-writer23 said...

Thanks for reading. I'll be sure to check out your blog.