Buster Olney wrote:Alex Rodriguez was supposed to be the guy who saved baseball, the way that Mark McGwire did in 1998. He was supposed to ride in and save the home run record from the clutches of suspected steroid user Barry Bonds. He was supposed to be the guy who would show that clean players could be just as prolific as the cheaters.
But that's all changed now, in the aftermath of Saturday's report by SI.com's Selena Roberts and David Epstein that Rodriguez tested positive for steroids in 2003. Rodriguez wouldn't respond to the information in the report, but anything he says really isn't going to change the fact that this will stick to him forever.
http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/columns/s ... id=3890934
The one player on the Yankees that I am actually a big fan of. The one player who I was 100% sure was totally clean (other than maybe Ken Griffey Jr). This actually depresses me a little more about MLB. Maybe Griffey will be the premier player who will "save" MLB, although it is the tail end of his career.
I have always liked Griffey, and now, at this point, he (and maybe Albert Puljous) appears to be the only thing left to root for (other then the Twins of course).