Mark McGwire steroids confession: Will it be enough?
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Finally, the Mark McGwire steroids admission has come. Will a simple confession be enough?
Enough for what? That鈥檚 the question.
As a matter of personal confession, McGwire鈥檚 emotional revelations, in which he told the Associated Press Monday that he used steroids periodically during his career 鈥 including when he set the single-season home run record in 1998 鈥 seem cathartic, and thus important.
As he told the AP, this is a secret he hid from everybody 鈥 coaches, teammates, family members, friends. That鈥檚 not a healthy way to go through life.
As to the effect on his athletic career, past and future, the result may be more mixed.
Enough for the fans?
Sure, he鈥檒l get a standing ovation in St. Louis when he鈥檚 introduced as the new Cardinal hitting coach at the home opener, but he鈥檇 have received that anyway.
St. Louis is a famously forgiving baseball town. After all, the fans there have put up with manager Tony La Russa for 14 years, despite the fact that he defines the phrase 鈥減rickly genius."
And they鈥檒l be standing in New York when the Cardinals come to town, too, but 鈥渙vation鈥 might not be the word the reception brings to mind.
McGwire鈥檚 problem is that steroids and his accomplishments 鈥 indeed, his very athletic persona 鈥 will now be inextricably intertwined. He was a slugger. Home runs 鈥 that鈥檚 what he did. Barry Bonds was fast, and a great fielder, once. McGwire never did much but pound baseballs into no-longer-spherical objects.
Enough for the media?
Yes, McGwire is saying he took steroids not to get bigger, but to heal. That approach seems to have worked for Yankee Andy Petttite, who copped to using Human Growth Hormone to try to get back on the field.
But McGwire has 鈥 or had 鈥 legs like sequoias. He strode to the plate at Busch Stadium, the grounds shook out in suburban Kirkwood. He gives the impression of someone who took drugs to grow, and therefore reporters are going to pursue that issue.
鈥淲ithout steroids, would you have amounted to much?鈥
McGwire鈥檚 going to get that question from every non-Cardinal baseball beat writer in America. That鈥檒l be tough to handle, because it will also be a question about whether he is worthy to coach hitting.
Maybe some frustrated player he鈥檚 trying to help also will get in his face 鈥 or at least think to himself 鈥 鈥淚f you know so much about this stuff, why did you need the juice?鈥
Enough for the Hall of Fame?
Make no mistake, La Russa will rise to his defense. (See 鈥減rickly鈥, above.) The whole subject could become a big distraction, particularly if the Cardinals, who are looking like a pretty good team right now, don鈥檛 win.
Hall of Fame? That鈥檚 easy. It is not happening, not now, not ... well, maybe not ever. There鈥檚 always the Veterans Committee, which considers players passed over by the Baseball Writers Association of America.
The sad part is that McGwire seems like a personable guy who鈥檚 been ripped up by this experience. 鈥淚 wish I had never played during the steroid era,鈥 McGwire told the AP Monday.
Us too, Mark. Us too.
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