Posted by dino27 on 1/23/2019 6:10:00 PM (view original):
one helps you reach your everyday normal potential.
one enhances beyond normal potential.
there is a major difference there.
greenies dont bulk you up..they wake you up.
To me this argument is utterly irrelevant unless you can counter the argument that Bonds and Clemens were already on a HOF pace before they started using.
As a moralistic argument this is nonsense. When Bonds and Clemens were playing MLB didn't have rules against using HGH or anabolic steroids. The argument is that they obviously should not have done this because using these substances without a prescription was illegal under US law. Players broke the law because they believed these substances would improve their performance on the field. Well guess what? Greenies were also illegal. Players used them because they believed that they would improve their performance on the field. There is no moral bright line separating one from the other. And it's reasonable to assume that many/most of the players who used the illegal drugs available during the 60s and 70s would likely have used the illegal drugs available in the 90s if that's when they happened to play. Why would they not? If you're willing to utilize one illegal substance to improve your performance why would you say no to another? All of these guys were prioritizing improving their on-field performance over following the law.
So it has to be a performance-oriented argument. And this only works if you believe the player in question would NOT have been a HOF without using the substances; IE steroids and not natural talent were what made them great. I think this argument works for guys like Sosa and McGwire who were basically not much but power. But Bonds had the best batting eye of his generation. He was a .298 career hitter. And he stole over 500 bags. Steroids didn't give him that eye or that sweet swing, and had very little to do with his baserunning prowess. As has already been argued here, he was already playing at an easy HOF pace before he started using in the late '90s. Same goes for Clemens. Statistically, Clemens has a strong argument as the best pitcher in the history of baseball. If you want to argue that without steroids he would have petered out from the late '90s, I buy that. You can hold him out of the greatest of all time argument. But through the end of 1998, while he was generally considered to be clean, he had more wins, more Ks, more innings, and a much better career ERA than Roy Halladay, who just went in on his first ballot. A 151 ERA+ to Halladay's 131 ERA+. If Halladay belongs - and I don't think he does - Clemens was already a shoe-in. Before steroids.
So there's no moralistic argument to separate them from Mays and Aaron. And there's no performance argument to separate them from 70% of the HOF. So how can you keep them out?