They are clean because J.Donovan says so | It's About The Money

They are clean because J.Donovan says so

SI.com’s esteemed John Donovan posted an article naming what he believes the be the all-clean team (of the Steroids Era, however you define it). All-clean? Just one man’s hunch, I guess. After all, how would he know? Shouldn’t our cynical side take over and suggest a renaming to “All Not Yet Accused Team” rather than the All-Clean Team.

Maybe these guys are truly beyond reproach and have kept clean their entire careers. Believe me, I would LOVE for every one of these guys to be spotless. It’s better for the game if they really have been.


Atlanta Braves: Can John Smoltz, Tom Glavine and Mike Hampton take the ball for 85-90 starts? Can Rafael Soriano stay healthy?

Are you kidding me? If Smoltz and Glavine each make 33 starts, you mean to tell me anyone would expect, in their right mind, that Hampton returns from 2 years recovering from injuries to make 20+ starts? Call Vegas; I will take the under.


Baltimore Orioles: We know the Orioles are rebuilding. If Erik Bedard is going to be traded, which seems inevitable, then who, besides Nick Markakis, can be serve as a root in that effort?

If Peter Angelos just let his “baseball people” do their “baseball things”, this once-proud franchise would be in a better position that it is now, which is likely one of looking UP at the Rays, which was unthinkable just a few years back.

Boston Red Sox: Will J.D. Drew bounce back from a subpar first year with the Red Sox? He fared well in the last two rounds of the 2007 postseason. Maybe he has made the transition, or maybe not.

Call Vegas on this one, too. Drew was huge on the post-season, but his dour personality and on-field attitudes will rub the RSN faithful bigtime. The Sox look loaded, no matter what.

Chicago Cubs: With contract in hand as the 2008 season starts, will Carlos Zambrano be Big Z, or less than that? Is Kosuke Fukudome going to be as good as everybody thinks he’s going to be?

100 years and counting? And what will Fukudome’s nickname be? K-Fuk? Fuku-do-me? Welcome to the Fuku-Dome.

Chicago White Sox: How good are John Danks and Gavin Floyd? The White Sox will sink without solid seasons from one or both. Will the money invested in Scott Linebrink and Octavio Dotel pay off, or make no difference in the way that the Orioles’ bullpen spending made no difference for Baltimore last year?

Kenny Williams sure thinks his team has a shot to return to 2005 glory, doesn’t he? Me, not so sure. Doesn’t seem like they have the rotation, especially after dealing Garland.

Colorado Rockies: Does Ubaldo Jimenez possess staying power? Does Ian Stewart have enough athleticism to make the adjustment to second base? Jimenez has added 15 pounds of muscle this offseason, writes Patrick Saunders.

15 pounds of muscle? Remember when that used to be an innocent and quaint sign of “hard work” and now we have to wonder how he did just that? Remind me of him come draft time in my fantasy league.

Cleveland Indians: Will Travis Hafner hit like Pronk, or will he put too much pressure on himself and struggle, even with a contract in hand? Will C.C. Sabathia’s impending free agency and on-going negotiations have any effect on him? Who will step up to be the right-handed hitter that the Indians need?

Clearly, not enough has been made about Sabathia’s free agency prospects. If I am NY or Boston, I am letting Johan go and hope both or one of them hit the FA markets. This guy is a horse and will be paid a smidge below Johan but will be at least as good going forward for the next 5-7 years.

Detroit Tigers: Will the Tigers’ rotation hold up? Can Dontrelle Willis make the transition to the AL? Is Detroit’s middle relief deep enough?

What a lineup. They will be able to keep the rotation afloat, so long as Maroth doesn’t return. Will be interesting to see Dontrelle in the AL. Wonder how often he pinch hits.

Florida Marlins: Can the stable of injured young starters bounce back? Might Hanley Ramirez be regarded as the league’s best player by season’s end?

Hanley Ramirez, the next MVP from a last place team? Wow, is he good. Too bad no one will see him live.

Houston Astros: Do the Astros have enough starting pitching behind Roy Oswalt? Will Miguel Tejada, generally known as a sensitive guy prone to outside forces, be able to successfully play through an FBI investigation and give Houston suitable shortstop defense?

What a mess. Yet, Drayton has no buyer’s remorse. Yeah, right.

Kansas City Royals: Will Zack Greinke build off his strong finish? Can Alex Gordon produce, after not producing much last year?

Honestly and secretly, I am rooting for the Royals, despite their ownership. If for no other reason than this.

Los Angeles Angels: Will Scot Shields bounce back and again give the Angels a dominant bullpen? Will Ervin Santana gain consistency, as he has in winter ball? Will Erick Aybar or Maicer Izturis win the shortstop job?

Will AL West team anyone challenge this team? Does the SS position battle even matter? A’s are down, Texas is just OK. Seattle, especially if they get Bedard, is a threat.

Los Angeles Dodgers: Is Andy LaRoche good enough to hold down third? Can Jason Schmidt give the Dodgers anything? Will Matt Kemp become the power hitter the Dodgers so desperately need?

If Torre is a good judge of talent, Kemp will play full time. If he’s hamstrung by that silly Pierre contract, then that’s a shame. Interesting how Mattingly bailed out before the season started.


Milwaukee Brewers: Will Chris Capuano pitch like the All-Star he has been in the past, or like the pitcher who went winless for almost five months last season? Will Ben Sheets break down? Will Eric Gagne bounce back from his Boston experience?


I enjoyed the resurgence of the Brewers. Home-grown, fairly likeable, even with Prince’s constant negativity towards his dad. We get it, you don’t like him. Move along. “Will Sheets break down?” Vegas, Jason here, again. I wi

ll take that bet. Sign me up.

Minnesota Twins: Assuming that the Twins swap Johan Santana before the start of the season, can their young pitchers step up to fill the gaps created by the departures of the left-hander, Carlos Silva and Matt Garza? Will Delmon Young become a more patient hitter and give himself a chance to a superstar?

I’m really interested in seeing this drama unfold. One, I’d like to see the Twins keep Johan to pair with a recovering Liriano. Those two could be dominant. And if Johan is dealt, it’s going to be a case study in dealing a stud pitcher. Will Bill Smith get good value this late or will he just take whatever’s out there? Or will he roll the dice, go for it this year and if out of it, deal Johan at the deadline. Talk about compelling…

New York Mets: Who will take the ball at the front end of the Mets’ rotation, and is that good enough to overcome the Phillies, Braves and the mental ghosts of last September?

Oh man. My Mets fans are still in the dumps about last year. And they have no pitching. Relying on Pedro for 33 starts is more than a risk.


New York Yankees: Will the New York rotation have enough depth? The Yankees hope that three youngsters, among Phil Hughes, Joba Chamberlain and Ian Kennedy, are consistent enough to hold down two spots, but does Mike Mussina have another solid 30-start season? Will Andy Pettitte be distracted in his preparation, by the Clemens situation?


I’m worried about Pettitte’s distraction. Unless, of course, he tells Congress that Clemens knew what he was doing and he can enter the year with a clear head. I’d lobby for a 6 man rotation to keep the kids’ IP under control and Moose fresher than last year. I’m also hoping we keep Hughes and the others; it’d be nice to have a group of home-grown kids to root for again. It’s been a while.

Oakland Athletics: Will Rich Harden and Bobby Crosby stay healthy? How long will Billy Beane wait before dealing Huston Street?

If Harden appears in more than 20 games, I will be stunned and he will have a chance at the AL CY. Crosby, overrated when healthy, rarely healthy. Yes, he signed a ball for me at Yankee Stadium when he was a rook, so I still root for him. But still, take the under.


Philadelphia Phillies: Will Brad Lidge be dominant Brad Lidge, or will he give the Philly fans reason to boo him? Can the Phillies hit enough to overcome the lack of depth in the rotation?

Talk about a fun team to watch: The Flyin’ Hawaiian, Utley, Rollins, Howard, etc.


St. Louis Cardinals: Their projected rotation is Adam Wainwright, Braden Looper, Joel Pineiro, Anthony Reyes and Matt Clement — is that enough? How quickly will the talent of super prospect Colby Rasmus manifest itself? How good is Rick Ankiel, really?

Enough for what? Last place? Yes. Hanley and Pujols can wonder what it’d be like to have a solid surrounding cast this year.


San Diego Padres: How many games will Jim Edmonds play, and how much will he hit? How soon will Brian Giles be back in the lineup? Will Kevin Kouzmanoff continue to progress as a big league hitter?

They have such a good rotation and Trevor’s still Trevor despite October. Wonder if they have enough to topple Arizona.

San Francisco Giants: Is the rotation good enough to carry what will be a sluggish offense? Will Tim Lincecum hold up and develop a better off-speed pitch? How different will the Giants’ clubhouse — and offense — be without Barry Bonds?

Lincecum and Cain: too bad they won’t be dealt for two teams’ farm systems to totally rebuild this mess from the ground up. Such a great ballpark, too bad it will be empty.

Seattle Mariners: We saw how good Felix Hernandez can be early last season, with his remarkable outing in Boston. Can he do that over a long season? Will Richie Sexson hit, and if he doesn’t, will it matter? Will the Mariners finally complete their trade for Bedard?

If they get Bedard to pair with Felix, they could threaten the Angels of Some Place in CA.

Tampa Bay Rays: Will Matt Garza’s game advance to the next level? Because if it does, the Rays will suddenly have a solid quorum in their rotation, to go along with an offense that will thrive if B.J. Upton and Carlos Pena hit as they did last year.

This team, if they had any baseball sense and discipline, they would threated the Jays for 3rd place and bury the Orioles in last. We’ll see. Tell ya what, though: They have a fun team to watch, just not at home in that airplane hangar.


Toronto Blue Jays: Can the Jays’ pitchers stay healthy, and if so, what could they be capable of? If A.J. Burnett makes 30 starts, might this rotation rank among the best in the majors? Will Vernon Wells bounce back from his shoulder surgery, and hit the way he did in 2006? How quickly can B.J. Ryan, coming back from elbow surgery, be a factor in Toronto’s bullpen?

How about 3rd place in the AL East? It’s reserved for you.


Washington Nationals: How will their new ballpark play, and how will it affect the current group of players? Who, besides Ryan Zimmerman, will anchor their rebuilding effort? With 600 plate appearances, how many homers will Wily Mo Pena hit?

Will they beat estimates again, or revert to the historically awful team most expected in 2007?

If you couldn’t tell, I can’t wait for the season!

I’ve picked a few of his selections of his along with his rationale on each that I find the most, um, interesting.

Alex Rodriguez– I don’t think Jose Canseco, despite the upcoming book, has anything on A-Rod. You can throw darts at his scary-perfect public persona and his sometimes goofy actions on the field, but come on, already. A-Rod is doing things that no one has ever done before.

So, for all the crap Canseco’s been alleging about ARod is false, but nearly everything else he has claimed in the first book has been true? Call me a bitter baseball fan, but I would not rush to put ARod on my “clean” list just yet. I hope against hope that he’s as sparkling clean as the driven snow, but if he’s not…(thoughts drift)

Albert Pujols — He’s taken some shots. About his age (he’s supposedly older than what he lets on). About steroids (his name is often bandied about). But the allegations never stick. He’s also had at least 32 HRs and 100 RBIs a year every year since his debut in ’01. A solid citizen, too.

Again, another with repeated mentions as a user. I’m a BIG Pujols fan, even as a Yankee fan. I bought my son a Pujols jersey back in ’03, long before he was big enough to wear it. His first 7 seasons have been historic in terms of productivity. Calling him a solid citizen, though, doesn’t make the whispers go away. You can be a solid citizen and still take PEDs. I think most everyone would agree that Pettitte is viewed as a solid citizen, a God-fearing man of faith…who also took HGH. I think the two are separate and divisible.


Manny Ramirez — Make fun of Manny all you want. Rip him for being me-first. Ridicule the way he plays left field. But put him up against the best hitters of this generation, or a lot of others — averaging 41 homers and 133 RBIs every 162 games — and you’d want him on your team.

What in the above “defense” of Manny would lead you to know he’s clean? Just because he’s goofy or aloof, or whatever? The one thing Manny is not is dumb. He’s a super smart hitter. Who’s also to say he’s not smart enough to take something that wouldn’t get him caught? Again, I have become overly cynical and I want to agree with Donovan here, but how can one say with any degree of certainty that any of these guys are lillywhite pure?


Frank Thomas — The Big Hurt may look the part of a juiced-up slugger, but he has a steroid-free reputation, and he’s the only active player to voluntarily talk to George Mitchell for his steroids report. The two-time MVP is headed to the Hall as one of the game’s most dangerous DHs.

Agreed. Period. Good for Big Frank to step up and take a stand. Call me a big fan now.


Vladimir Guerrero — The Hall of Fame debate about “feared” hitters will be raised again when Guerrero’s name comes up. Yet, at 31, that’s still a long ways off. Vlad has a lot of chances to add to a career that, barring further injury, should carry him well past 500 homers and into the Hall.


I love Vlad. I love how he can hit anything from his shoetops to his forehead. I love how he doesn’t wear batting gloves. I love how he keeps quiet and plays. I love his arm. I hate how he walks like an old man and his back scares the bejesus outta me but that’s another issue. But given the disproportional rate of the accused and proven guilty come from South/Central America and the Caribbean, how can we be sure The Impaler hasn’t used anything to battle his injuries to get back on the field? After all, the D.R. is #2 in players who have tested positive. That has to speak to something, doesn’t it?

Check out this table from ESPN.com:

Where they’re from
Since the start of the 2005 season, 157 professional players have been suspended by Major League Baseball for testing positive for performance-enhancing drugs. Of that number, 104 players, or 66 percent, are still affiliated with their Major League franchise. Here is a breakdown by birthplace of the suspended players:
United States: 72 [46 percent]
Dominican Republic: 37 [24 percent]
Venezuela: 35 [22 percent]
Cuba: 3 [2 percent]
Japan: 3 [2 percent]
Mexico: 2 [1 percent]
Australia: 1 [.64 percent]
Canada: 1 [.64 percent]
Colombia: 1 [.64 percent]
Panama: 1 [.64 percent]
Puerto Rico: 1 [.64 percent]

Back to Donovan’s list…

Greg Maddux – For all the talk of Clemens, Maddux enters this season only eight wins shy of passing Clemens on the all-time win list (Maddux currently has 347), thus becoming the most successful pitcher of the past 40 years. One look at him and his stuff removes all doubt about using anything unnatural.

So, if you look professorial, you must be clean? So if you’re pitching into your 40′s and aren’t throwing 95+ mph, you have gotten by on smarts and guile alone? If we have learned ONE thing during this dirty laundry airing time, it’s that pitchers have been using PEDs at a virtual equal rate as hitters and size alone is not the giveaway. Seems that HGH, which aids in recovery more than mass-building steroids, was favored by pitchers.

Check out this table from that same ESPN.com article:

Pitchers make up the largest percentage of the 157 players who have been suspended over the past two seasons.

Pitchers: 87 [55 percent]
Infielders: 32 [20 percent]
Outfielders: 20 [13 percent]
Catchers: 18 [12 percent]

Again, back to Donovan’s list.

Pedro Martinez — Injuries have cost Martinez the chance at some more wins, but when he’s healthy and on — as he should be this year — Martinez is without peer. His lifetime 1.03 WHIP is the best among active players and third best of all-time. A first-ballot electee, no doubt.

Now, Pedro is slight of build, but has suffered a number of injuries. But for me, the biggest red flag comes from this article, in which Pedro defends “controversial fitness guru and massage therapist Angel ‘Nao’ Presinal”. Who’s he, you ask. Read:


Presinal, 54, popped up on Major League Baseball’s radar in October 2001 after he and former two-time American League MVP Juan Gonzalez, then his primary client, were linked to an unmarked bag, reportedly containing steroids and hypodermic needles, that was seized by

Canadian authorities at the Toronto airport. Questioned by Canadian Border Service agents, Gonzalez said the bag belonged to Presinal. Presinal has said the bag and everything in it belonged to Gonzalez, then a Cleveland Indians outfielder.

And Presinal had THIS to say, and doesn’t it make you the least bit skeptical?

“Pedro is working again [with me],” Presinal gushes. “Pedro will be brand-new, the Pedro of maybe ’97. It is my challenge, to build Pedro the old Pedro way. The old Pedro form. Everybody is waiting for Pedro. Everybody will have the new, like the old Pedro. “Pedro will again have the power in the fastball.”

Donovan’s list is much greater than I listed and my main takeaway is this: I hope he’s 100% correct as these are guys we all root for, guys we want our kids to look up to (on the field), guys we hope will own some of the most prestigious records in the game when they are done.

Baseball NEEDS these guys to be clean. I pray they are.

 

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