Alex Rodriguez Will Save Baseball from Steroids
Alex Rodriguez will break Barry Bondsโ career home run recordโand he wonโt need to hit 73 in one year to do it.
If he can play seven more years and average 30 home runs each year (heโs averaged 44 so far), thatโs all heโll need. Even assuming heโll decline a bit in his 30's, he still looks a good bet to get there.
Keep in mind that from age 33 to 39, Bonds averaged 47 home runs per season. Rodriguez would break his record by averaging 17 fewer over the same period of his career.
Rodriguez wonโt be a third baseman in his late thirties either. The Yankees will eventually move him into a DH role to help preserve his body and maximize his chances of breaking the record.
Theyโll do everything possible to keep him in New York, as well. They know heโs got the best, and probably the only, shot at getting the career home run record back into pinstripes again for a long time.
And weโll sweep the steroids under the rug as much as possible.
Was it good for baseball when Bonds broke Hank Aaronโs record? Just looking at that question, yes, it was.
Aaron took about 30 years to break Ruthโs mark, and Bonds took around another 30 to break Aaronโs.
This is a significant record, an almost sacred number to baseball fans, and the hype that surrounds an attempt on it generates so much buzz and attention that it only serves to promote the sport.
But then the downside comes into play.
When Bonds passed Aaron, the accomplishment was so tainted by allegations of steroid use that there were suggestions of adding the dreaded asterisk to the record book. The very idea undermines all the good that the chase for 756 did for baseball.
What took 33 years of buildup for Bonds to finally accomplish will take less than 10 for A-Rod. The numbers indicate that Rodriguez should take the career home run title by 2015โand when he does, the memory of Barry Bonds will fade.
When malcontents bring up the fact that Rodriguez tested positive for steroids, weโll look down at them and say, โYeah, but that was back in Texas. Before he was great.โ
Weโll forget that 2001-2003 were three of his biggest home run-hitting years and point out that he would have broken it without performance enhancement anyway.
Weโll choose to remember โclean Alexโ in those pinstripes, that symbol of this beautiful game, rounding the bases after number 763.
No asterisk needed.*







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