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It seemed that the Steroids Era had finally come to an end, but those pesky performance-enhancing drugs and the superstars who use them just won’t go away. It happened again on Thursday, when Major League Baseball suspended Dodgers left fielder Manny Ramirez for 50 games for using HCG, a women’s fertility drug used to restore the production of testosterone after the end of a cycle of steroid use. Ramirez’s suspension came three months after Yankees third baseman Alex Rodriguez admitted to using steroids earlier in his career in light of the disclosure he had tested positive during MLB’s survey testing in 2003.

It now seems nearly every prolific slugger of the past two decades has either been found to have used steroids or been implicated in using them, including Barry Bonds, Mark McGwire, Sammy Sosa, and Rafael Palmeiro. Nor have pitchers been immune, as Roger Clemens and Andy Pettitte have been embroiled in PED controversies, among others.

That Ramirez got caught was enough to make Astros first baseman Lance Berkman roll his eyes and wonder what’s coming next. “I wasn’t surprised,” said Berkman. “I think anybody that makes the game look clownish is under suspicion, because it’s just not that easy. It’s unfortunate that here we go again, with another round of steroid questions.”

The questions never seem to stop, but that doesn’t bother Braves third baseman Chipper Jones. He understands today’s 24-hour news cycle, and he’s always willing to give honest and thoughtful answers. When asked how much Ramirez’s suspension would hurt the perception of the game, Jones gave a heartfelt response. “I’m like everybody else, I’d like to know that my heroes did it the right way,” Jones said. “Guys like Manny and A-Rod, Barry, Roger Clemens, and Mark McGwire have so many fans across America that live and die with every at-bat or every pitch. And now they think differently.”

Jones also realizes that every time another player is suspended, rightly or wrongly, it causes many fans to call into the question the integrity of every major league player. “You can’t have arguably the greatest pitcher of our era, arguably the two greatest players of our era, and now another very, very good player be under this cloud of suspicion and not feel like it’s ruined it for everybody,” Jones said. “But what are you going to do? You can’t be born in another era. It is what it is. It is the steroid era. We’re all going to have to answer steroid questions, most likely for the rest of our careers. We’re all going to have to be judged accordingly. I just hate to see people look down their nose at our game when there are a very small percentage of players who are cheating. It just so happens that it’s magnified because it has been the best players in our game that have been caught doing it.”

Cardinals catcher Jason LaRue, though, believes it is good for the game that one of its biggest names has been suspended, because he feels that it puts the drug-testing system that was agreed to by Major League Baseball and the Major League Baseball Players Association-with the helpful nudge of some grandstanding members of Congress-beyond reproach. “It goes to show that the system works,” La Rue said. “If you’re doing it, you’re going to get caught.”

Whether they are numbed by the never-ending stream of steroids news or are just proponents of freedom of choice, some players aren’t all that concerned about the issue. Count Pirates first baseman Adam LaRoche among that camp. “It’s part of the game,” he said. “Guys make decisions. We are grown men. You’re going to do what you want to do. Some guys make good [decisions]. Some guys make bad ones. I’m not one to judge on what anybody does. It’s their career, their teams, their future. I don’t hold it against any of them that did it. I don’t see it like they are taking food off my plate, or taking money away that I should be making because they choose to do it. Some of my friends are the ones that were caught doing it. I don’t look at them any different, and I never will. It bothers some guys. It doesn’t bother me.”

It came as no surprise that the Diamondbacks fired classy manager Bob Melvin on Thursday night. Since he had won the National League Manager of the Year award in 2007 after the Diamondbacks won the NL West, things have gone downhill. The D’backs got off to a 19-7 start last season and a 6½-game lead in the NL West, but they went 63-73 the rest of the way to finish 82-80 and two games behind the Dodgers in the division race. They had a 12-17 record this season when Melvin was fired.

However, the big surprise came when the Diamondbacks promoted A.J. Hinch, their 34-year-old player development director, to be their new manager. While Hinch has been considered a lock to eventually become a general manager, he had never managed at any level until Friday. “He brings unique leadership and perspective to the job,” Diamondbacks GM Josh Byrnes said. “We’re not here to reinvent the wheel, but to change to the nature of the job a little bit? OK, we’ll do that. A.J.’s a leader. He connects with people. He gets things done.”

Hinch is the youngest manager in the major leagues since the IndiansEric Wedge made his debut at the age of 35 on Opening Day in 2003. Wedge, however, had been managing the Indians’ Triple-A team when he was tabbed for the job. “I’m very comfortable with pressure, with expectations, with high standards, with accountability,” Hinch told Nick Piecoro of the Arizona Republic. “It’s how I’ve always lived my life. It’s the only way I know.”

The Diamondbacks have built their team around a core of home-grown players, and Hinch believes that will work to his advantage while he does his on-the-job training. “I feel a part of each and every one of them,” Hinch said. “I’ve been involved in different aspects of their careers so far, and I think that’s to their advantage, and I think that’s to my advantage.”

The theory that the Yankees-Red Sox rivalry was beginning to lose some of its intensity because of the incessant media and fan hype surrounding each game was certainly debunked this past Tuesday night at Yankee Stadium. The Red Sox were not pleased that the Yankees’ Joba Chamberlain hit left fielder Jason Bay in the numbers in the fifth inning after he had homered earlier in the game. Yankees manager Joe Girardi, though he would not admit it publicly, was incensed, because he believed that Red Sox first-base coach Tim Bogar was tipping pitch locations to the hitters.

The teams next meet on June 9 at Fenway Park, and during an interview with WEEI-AM in Boston, Red Sox pitching coach John Farrell sounded like a man who sensed that there was more animosity coming. “Those things aren’t forgotten,” Farrell said. “Typically, we let the game play out itself, because I think our guys have each other’s backs and they’re certainly going to be supportive if a situation like that were to arise. [Chamberlain] strikes out 12 guys, doesn’t seem to have too many command issues, and if there was a purpose or intent to throw up and in, or if the intent was even further than that, to send a clear-cut message, you can disguise it a little bit more than with a first-pitch pitch in the middle of the back to Jason Bay.”

Bay wouldn’t outright accuse Chamberlain of throwing at him, but he was suspicious. “There are a few factors you look at,” said Bay. “That kind of stuff happens. Given that point of the game, especially with the way he was throwing the ball, you would figure that he would have just gone ahead and kept throwing the ball like he was doing. No one ever really knows. It’s not the first time I’ve been hit, and it won’t be the last.”

Meanwhile, an inning earlier, Girardi had moved to the far end of the home dugout and began screaming at Bogar from the top step. While neither man would specifically address the situation after the game, according to those near the argument Girardi had implied that the Yankees would reciprocate by saying, “you’re going to get somebody hurt.” Girardi felt that Bogar was moving around in the coaching box a little too much, a tactic that can be used to tip pitch location.

Rays left fielder Carl Crawford stole a base in nine straight games before being shut down on the basepaths by the Yankees on Thursday. He was the first player to have a streak that long since Corey Patterson did it with the 2006 Orioles. Included in that streak was a six-steal game last Sunday against the Red Sox that tied the modern major league record. Crawford has also been successful on 22 consecutive steal attempts dating to last season.

Crawford changed his off-season training routine after been bothered with sore hamstrings throughout much of last season, working out on grass with a new trainer in his hometown of Houston, rather than on turf at the Athletes Performance Institute in Arizona. He also has began taking larger leads this season, and has something to play for as the Rays hold a $10 million club option for 2010.

Crawford’s fast start has cause some to wonder if he could become the major league’s first 100-steal man since Vince Coleman with the 1987 Cardinals. Crawford says no way. “That’s a big round number,” said Crawford. “I don’t think I’d be able to walk at the end of the year.”

Rays manager Joe Maddon agrees. “There’s a lot of pounding in 100 steals,” he said. “That’s a lot of getting on base, that’s a lot of running. He plays on turf. So that’s kind of a lot to ask. I would just prefer he could just approach the year picking up significant steals.”


Interesting facts:

  • Yankees right-hander Joba Chamberlain had 12 strikeouts in 5 2/3 innings Tuesday against the Red Sox, becoming just the fifth major league pitcher since 1900 to have that many strikeouts in that few innings, and the first since the PhilliesCole Hamels had 12 strikeouts in 5 1/3 innings against the Braves in 2006. The others: J.R. Richard of the 1978 Astros, Kevin Appier of the 1994 Royals, and Curt Schilling of the 1997 Phillies.

    Chamberlain also allowed four runs in the first inning before recording an out to become the third major league pitcher since 1900 to strike out at least 12 in a game in which he gave up at least four first-inning runs, joining Herb Score of the 1959 White Sox and Steve Carlton of the 1973 Phillies.

    Furthermore, Chamberlain became the first pitcher to get at least nine called strikeouts in a game since Mike Mussina with the 2001 Yankees against the Red Sox.

  • When the Royals hosted the Mariners in a two-game series this past week, it marked just the second time the teams met while both were in first place. The other was in 2003.

  • The Cardinals scored in five consecutive innings in Tuesday’s 10-7 loss to the Phillies, the first time they had done so in a home defeat since 1917.

  • The Phillies went a major league-record 24 consecutive games to begin the season without allowing an unearned run, until third baseman Pedro Feliz‘s throwing error led to a run against the Mets on Wednesday. The 1998 Phillies held the record.

  • The Red Sox set an American League record by scoring 12 runs in an inning before making an out during the sixth inning of their 13-3 win over Cleveland on Thursday. The mark had been 11 runs by the Tigers in the sixth inning of their 19-1 win over the Yankees on June 17, 1925. The major league record of 12, which the Red Sox tied, was first accomplished by the Dodgers in the eighth inning against the Phillies on May 24, 1953.

  • Rays first baseman Carlos Pena hit a 10th-inning home run against the Yankees on Wednesday in his team’s first game at the new Yankee Stadium. The Rays never homered during extra innings in 11 seasons at the old Yankee Stadium.

  • Rays third baseman Evan Longoria became the fourth player in the last 10 seasons to record his 35th RBI by the 29th game, joining Manny Ramirez of the 1999 Indians, Lance Berkman of the 2006 Astros, and Alex Rodriguez of the 2007 Yankees.

  • The Dodgers became the first major league team to win their first 13 home games of a season since the Detroit Wolverines of the National League won 18 straight in 1886.


Major League Rumors and Rumblings:
The White Sox have interest in free agent Pedro Martinez now that Jose Contreras has been bounced from the starting rotation. … The Indians are canvassing each of the other 29 major league clubs, looking for relief pitching, and they’re closing in on signing right-hander Luis Vizcaino, recently released by the Cubs. … While the Orioles have three pitchers who have had 30-save seasons in their careers in George Sherrill, Chris Ray, and Danys Baez, set-up man Jim Johnson is likely to wind up in the closer’s role at some point this season. … Scouts who have watched Athletics first baseman Jason Giambi say that he has lost considerable bat speed, and those who have watched Tigers left-hander Dontrelle Willis‘ last two minor league starts on his rehab assignment are convinced that he is over his control problems and ready to succeed in the major leagues again.


Three series to watch in the early part of the week, with probable pitching matchups:

Thank you for reading

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sunpar
5/10
"arguably the greatest pitcher of our era"

Chipper implying that Clemens might have been a better pitcher than Maddux? Blasphemy! :P
tbunns
5/10
Just curious...why is Bob Melvin a classy (former) manager?
perrotto
5/11
Having had the chance to talk to Bob on numerous occassions, he was accomodating, friendly and polite. And here is something I found out today: The Diamondbacks told him last Wednesday that he'd been fired then asked him to manage that night and again Thursday in San Diego while they could have time to get everything in place for A.J. Hinch to take over on Friday in Phoenix. It was pretty classy for Melvin to agree to do that and also attend a press conference. Trust me on this, very few managers would do that regardless if they were still getting paid for the remainder of their contract. To me, that's classy.
Oleoay
5/12
I wonder what's with all the Bay Area catcher connections... Brenly, Melvin and now Hinch were catchers for San Francisco or Oakland. Only Showalter didn't fit the mold.
JayhawkBill
5/10
After several Red Sox perceived that Joe Girardi was threatening players, Joba Chamberlain drilled Jason Bay without repercussion. Earlier this year Josh Beckett might have, but didn't, hit Bobby Abreu after he called time while Beckett was winding up, and it resulted in a suspension for Beckett. From the perspective of the Red Sox, that must be frustrating.
Oleoay
5/11
The idea that a beanball and then a reprisal assumes the rivalry has restarted is an indication of how weak the rivalry has been in recent years. Each year, some team gets into a beanball war with some other team, maybe even a benches clearing incident... and it's mostly forgotten next year.

Personally, I wish MLB would crack down on this kind of reprisal stuff. If you think steroids are dangerous, try having an object thrown 90 mph at your body.

Try, instead, to encourage the rivalries similar to the Mets and Phillies each predicting that they are the team to beat in the NL East.
oira61
5/10
Would it be possible to have BP declared a steroid-reaction-free zone? This kind of story is what the mainstream media does -- incessantly -- and it's not what I come here for.

perrotto
5/11
I, too, wish I never had to write about steroids again. However, since I am the major-league "beat" writer at BP, I can't totally ignore a major story. It might be more mainstrem that most stories on this site but I spent plenty of time to get the most informative and insightful quotes from players as possible.
cams68
5/10
""including Barry Bonds, Mark McGwire, Sammy Sosa, and Rafael Palmeiro""

Rafael Palmeiro tested positive.
Mark McGwire has a former teammate that says he injected him.
Barry Bonds has BALCO, league of shadows, and a federal perjury indictment.

Sammy Sosa hit a lot of homeruns, and corked his bat. But never tested positive, doesn't have a former trainer either ratting him out or going to jail not to rat him out. There's no book, no former teammate accusing him. There's no company he was associated with that had anything to do with making steroids, as far as we know.

Now he's probably guilty of something, but to say he's been implicated like the other three have is just disingenuous, and it's at least the second time you've done this here.

Really like your writing, but this is off-putting.



JayhawkBill
5/10
In John Perrotto's defense, here's an excerpt from the Mitchell Report:

"...Canseco, who repeated the allegations from his memoir, said he had knowledge of McGwire’s alleged use of steroids. Through his personal lawyer, I asked McGwire to meet with me for an interview about these issues, but he declined to do so. I then sent his lawyer a list of specific questions about whether McGwire had ever used steroids or other performance enhancing substances without a prescription during his major league career, in the hope that McGwire would be willing to provide a response outside of the context of an interview. Neither McGwire nor his lawyer responded to that letter. (I sent similar letters with specific questions to lawyers for Barry Bonds, Rafael Palmeiro, Sammy Sosa, and Gary Sheffield, none of whom provided answers to my questions either.)"

Some other sources, such as LIFE magazine, considered Sosa's refusal to deny steroid use as involving himself in the issue. Most news sources agree with you, cams68, that there's no evidence, and I know of nothing except this refusal to answer George Mitchell that would qualify as evidence, but John's not alone in his position.

Of course, The Onion Sports Network pictured Sammy Sosa returning to Spring Training in 2007 carrying his man-bag full of steroids, but there are occasional claims that, despite The Onion's popularity, not everything written there is entirely accurate.
Oleoay
5/11
No active major league baseball player besides Frank Thomas replied to the Mitchell Report. We can't assume that just because Sosa didn't respond, that implicates him. The meager things really tying Sosa to PEDs is being called before Congress, his home run numbers, and his physical appearance. But if numbers dictated why people were called before Congress, then why weren't Bonds, Alex Rodriguez, Manny Ramirez, or any others called? Palmeiro did not have anywhere near Sosa/McGwire/Bonds's level of production and he was called to Congress.
JayhawkBill
5/11
I believe that the MLBPA was asking/advising/directing its members not to correspond with the Mitchell investigation, and one could cite that as the reason that Sosa chose not to cooperate.

Notably, though, of McGwire, Bonds, Palmeiro, Sheffield, and Sosa, the five players cited in my quote above, all but Sosa have been linked to PED use.

That said, back again to The Onion, which is indisputably more fun and potentially more informative than whatever I might post regarding PED use in MLB.
eighteen
5/11
"We're not here to reinvent the wheel, but to change the nature of the job a little bit.."

Wtf does that mean, and how does a PD director with no managerial experience accomplish it?

Clearly, AZ's front office has no clue what it's doing.