Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Mets clubhouse attendant rats out steroid users

It was only a matter of time before someone in MLB spilled the beans again. Why not everyone involved in this baseball scandal reveal all of the hidden information? It's going to surface sooner or later anyway. This week a former Mets clubhouse attendant announced player names he distributed steroids to throughout his 10-year tenure with New York organization. He's agreed to testify in front of a grand jury and meet with MLB's steroid investigators. Maybe in the coming weeks MLB will shade more light on who these players are which were connected to this illegal activity.

The NBA ref gambling, Michael Vick's dog fighting, and now this incident springs up. I guess drugs and corruption will always find a place in sports...which is a real shame. There used to be a time when fans didn't have to hear about these disappointing stories and enjoy players' natural abilities who didn't cheat to win (or did a good job of getting away with it). If a crackdown hasn't been imposed on baseball clubhouses I don't see how MLB will ever cut down on drug use. Random smoke from blunts can even rise in the air around the locker room and it's no big deal!

Bud Selig hasn't reassured baseball fans integrity will be restored in the game and doesn't go out of way to take drastic measures to stop corruption. He's too busy sitting on plush recliners in luxury boxes and counting money. Damn it Selig! Get off your high horse and take affirmative action (start serving those suspensions and pay cuts) because the fans deserve better. They pay good money for tickets and ballpark merchandise to watch their favorite teams and players only to find out one guy everyone knows in the clubhouse is a drug pusher and several admired performers have over a dozen horse hormone pills stashed away in their locker.

This ex-Mets employee is facing major long-term charges. He's being fined $500,000 and could serve up to 25 years in prison. People will truly risk their life and good name for money. Just wait until the client names are rattled off on a list and the players get busted. It's going to be a tough pill to swallow (much like the horse pills and methamphetamines they've popped). Before the baseball world knows it bat boys and mascots will come forth, revealing the shocking accounts of how they assisted with syringe procedures to players and smuggled dime bags and unprescribed pain killers into the clubhouse. Yeah...more shame to the game is yet to come.

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