Unforgiven: A Tale of Two Cheaters (MyResponse)
Posted on 27. Jan, 2010 at 8:04 am by The Big Cat in MLB Baseball
ESPN’S Gene Wojciechowski posted this on the Megaships front page Tuesday morning. Giving us his unsolicited thoughts about two self-admitted baseball cheaters, Pete Rose and Mark McGwire. Wojciechowski however, gets a major fact in his argument wrong. Only one of these players broke rules established by Major League Baseball carrying official consequences.
The argument is correct in the sense that yes, Rose should have just taken Steroids or HGH, (which still cannot be tested for accurately). Put up even more monstrous numbers, and one day be enshrined in Cooperstown. That is because taking PED’s were not specifically banned by MLB with the stipulation that any one caught doing said act would be given a lifetime ban with no chance of parole, no questions asked. Unlike Mr. Rose’s vice, gambling on baseball.
In fact, it wasn’t even until 1991 that Steroids/PED’s were even a banned substance in Major League Baseball. And 2004, that testing with penalties in the loosest of terms was even administered. Meaning first time offenders had mandatory counseling and a second offense equaled a 15-day suspension. On January 13, 2005 MLB testing policy was changed to penalize first time users with a 10-day suspension, and the public release of the names of those testing positive for PED use. And November 15th, of the same year to reach the current penalties of 50 games for the first violation, 100 for the second and a lifetime ban for the third transgression.
Yes Gene, Pete Rose definitely would have been better off committing an act that didn’t even carry a penalty until 2005, versus betting on MLB games, which happens to have a very famous and well-known lifetime ban. Wojciechowski and co. want to keep burning players at the stake for doing something that wasn’t even deemed a big enough offense to warrant testing until 2003. If blame must be handed out, why not turn to the union heads or the greedy evil owners. Yet according to these talking heads, they are judge and jury for an entire generation of players which under their watch, will surely never reach the Hall Of Fame.
By Gene Wojciechowski
ESPN.comMark McGwire is back in. But Pete Rose is still out?
Major League Baseball continues its hit streak of hypocrisy.
How is it that McGwire receives a standing O from St. Louis Cardinals fans, but Rose still has his 68-year-old face pressed against MLB’s window? McGwire not only goes directly from his self-imposed isolation tank to a big league coaching job, but he has Cards manager Tony La Russa running interference against anyone who thinks this is a bogus idea.
Meanwhile, Rose, who has forgotten more about hitting than McGwire will ever know, remains an outcast. Huh?
They both compromised the game and they both suffered irreparable harm to their reputations. But somehow Rose’s baseball sins are mortal and McGwire’s are venial. Doesn’t make any sense.
Just so there’s no confusion, Rose was a creep. He gambled on baseball games, got caught and then lied through every one of his Charlie Hustle teeth for nearly 15 years. He violated the game’s most sacred rule and was thrown out of the profession like a scuffed ball gets tossed aside by a plate umpire.
Then-MLB commissioner Bart Giamatti is the one who banished Rose from baseball in August 1989. Eight days after Rose signed the agreement, Giamatti died of a heart attack. His successor, Fay Vincent, didn’t budge on the ban. Nor has Vincent’s successor, Bud Selig, who considered Giamatti one of his closest friends.
Rose finally admitted he bet on baseball in 2004. Doesn’t matter. The MLB-issued lifetime restraining order prohibits him from coming within a foul pole of the game.
What Rose should have done is this: Take illegal steroids and performance enhancers, deceive baseball fans, make millions of tainted dollars, cheat the record book and the Roger Maris family, press the truth mute button, go into hiding and then reappear five years later with tears in his eyes and a confession with more holes than a catcher’s mask. (PEDs didn’t you help you hit home runs, Mark? Really?)
To McGwire’s credit, at least he admitted the obvious and apologized. Still, how come Rose’s gambling admission in 2004 makes no difference to MLB, but McGwire’s recent admission of steroid use (nearly six years after his embarrassing congressional appearance) results in a welcome-back hug from the league office?
Not everyone is thrilled with Big Mac’s return. Since McGwire’s Confession Lite, Hall of Famers such as Carlton Fisk and Ferguson Jenkins have ripped him. Adolphus A. Busch IV, whose family once owned the Cardinals, also put McGwire on a hitting tee and swung for the fences. And HOF 2010 inductee Whitey Herzog questioned the blind loyalty of some Cards fans.
McGwire deserves it all.
Soon, McGwire will report to spring training as the team’s new hitting instructor. He gets to wear a major league uniform again. He gets to do what he loves.
Not Rose. The all-time hits leader (his career .303 batting average is 40 points higher than McGwire’s) is in a permanent holding pattern. Selig sits in MLB’s control tower and refuses to let Rose land.
This isn’t about the Hall of Fame. The moment Rose made a bet on baseball is the moment he forever forfeited his bronze plaque. McGwire should be held to an identical standard. The moment he began defrauding the game, the fans and the record book with his PED-aided dingers is the moment he became persona non Cooperstown.
Rose gambled. McGwire juiced. Both cheated.
If Selig is going to embrace McGwire’s explanation and apology, then he has to do the same for Rose. It’s time to end the double standard endorsed by the commissioner’s office and MLB.
Not to go all Reagan-ish on you, but Mr. Selig, tear … that … Rose … wall … down.
I don’t know if it’s the right thing to do, but it’s the fair thing to do. You can’t give McGwire a second chance, but ignore Rose’s plea for reinstatement. You can’t hug one cheater, but stiff-arm the other.
Rose has apologized for his mistakes for six years.
McGwire has apologized for his for two weeks.
Rose has groveled, begged and pleaded for forgiveness. He even sells T-shirts on his Web site that read, “I’m sorry I bet on baseball.”
McGwire issued a statement to The Associated Press and agreed to a handful of sit-down interviews, but has yet to do a full news conference (the recent six-minute fiasco in St. Louis doesn’t count). Put it this way: McGwire hasn’t gone through the full truth car wash.
Yes, Rose betrayed the game by gambling on baseball. There’s no way around that elephant in the middle of the dugout. But McGwire, Alex Rodriguez and Andy Pettitte — admitted PED users — betrayed a similar trust.
Selig is a compassionate guy. It is his strength and his weakness. He adored Giamatti, so perhaps he worries about compromising his friend’s legacy by reversing the Rose ban.
But who knows if Giamatti wouldn’t have softened his own stance over 20-plus years? Anyway, Giamatti made a decision on his own. Selig is secure enough to do the same when it comes to Rose.
Rose made his major league debut in 1963, the same year McGwire was born. McGwire made his major league debut in 1986, the same year Rose played his final game. So they are linked by years, by scandals and by confessions
If Selig does the right thing, Rose and McGwire will be linked by 2010, too: the season they both returned from exile



DonnyB
27. Jan, 2010
Good stuff. Gene needs to be called out on this. MLB has taken a verbal lambasting for allowing roids/PEDs to go on in it’s league for such a lengthy period of time, and rightfully so. However, this blatant mis-step is not a correctable error by MLB. It would be like the government hunting down a 30 year old man during Prohibition for drinking before those laws were enacted. If the MLB were to ban McGwire and others for admitted PED use then 1) Nobody would admit it or 2) Half the league would be banned.
Meerkat
27. Jan, 2010
Until they take the ‘lifetime banishment for gambling rule’ off the books, they can’t open the door for Rose. Simple. Case closed.
Past roid users can admit to their cheating, cry, say they are sorry, then join up with their clubs again. Hell, Andy Pettitte just pitched in the World series.
Jeremiah Ma-stole-i
27. Jan, 2010
Winners cheat, and cheaters win.
3D
27. Jan, 2010
Sounds a lot like that ‘quitters’ note you left me on my car after I quit the Challengers.
bbryan
27. Jan, 2010
King played Challengers?
Jeremiah Ma-stole-i
27. Jan, 2010
No.
Quitters win, and winners quit?
Bryan, I noticed your ‘TAS 2 UW’ post is up at ducksportsnews.
bbryan
27. Jan, 2010
And i really hate this fucking hack of a writer, this article really deserves it’s own FJM treatment, but I’ll do a cliff notes here:
“Mark McGwire is back in. But Pete Rose is still out?
Major League Baseball continues its hit streak of hypocrisy”
Back in from what? He was never punished to begin with. Rose admitted gambling which everyone knows is the cardinal sin. When you get off to this bad of a start you should just quit writing, your article has no chance.
“Rose gambled. McGwire juiced. Both cheated.”
One carries a lifetime ban, the other wasn’t tested for. Got it? Lets move on.
“Soon, McGwire will report to spring training as the team’s new hitting instructor. He gets to wear a major league uniform again. He gets to do what he loves.
Not Rose. The all-time hits leader (his career .303 batting average is 40 points higher than McGwire’s) is in a permanent holding pattern.”
Okay, I’m on the record before as saying Rose absolutely should be in the hall of fame. But to act like Rose should ever be allowed to be anywhere near a Major League (or minor league) clubhouse is fucking asinine. What part of lifetime ban for gambling is so hard to understand? Why is it so hard to understand the damage a gambling scandal would do to the sport? It could cripple it.
“Rose has apologized for his mistakes for six years.
McGwire has apologized for his for two weeks.”
This article is deteriating quickly.
“I don’t know if it’s the right thing to do, but it’s the fair thing to do.”
Let me help you Gene since you are obviously struggling. The RIGHT thing to do has already been done. And that is a life time ban, not a 10 year, not a 20 year, not a 50 year, a life time ban.
bbryan
27. Jan, 2010
Bryan, I noticed your ‘TAS 2 UW’ post is up at ducksportsnews.
Awesome – we’ll have to link to them on our home page. We also need to get some HTML tags setup for our comments.
3D
27. Jan, 2010
I think the note said quitters never win and winners never quit. Funny, b/c I got the W that day…
And Ski was 2-2.
Yay quitting!
Stake
28. Jan, 2010
I think a main point of the article was that the commissioner dying just 8 days after the suspension basically closed the book. I wouldn’t doubt he was taking roids too. Rose has turned into this false image of punishment for gambling in baseball and sports in general. If they treat a guy with such harsh punishment, then they mean business and therefor they(pro leagues) should be trusted as such. Lol. You really think gambling isn’t prevalent in sports? I’m sure MJ never bet on his games. Pretty sure horse owners bet on their 4 legged beasts. You should HAVE to bet on your team.
American Horse Racing Results
18. Feb, 2010
A well written article to be sure. Keep up the good work.