[情報] 該面對酒精問題了

看板MLB作者時間13年前 (2013/01/22 12:17), 編輯推噓16(1606)
留言22則, 21人參與, 最新討論串1/1
http://www.murraychass.com/?p=5710 Nearly two weeks later the debate rages on over the outcome of the Hall of Fame voting. It has dominated baseball’s off-season. Even the Hall of Famers themselves, elected by the writers in a less controversial, less contentious, time, have added their views. But as the all-steroids, all-the-time discussion has gone on, it has prompted a long-nagging question in my mind: why steroids and not alcohol? Asked that question, baseball people usually give the simple answer: alcohol is legal, steroids are not. Or they might add: alcohol doesn’t enhance performance; steroids do. However, to repeat the start of a column I wrote nearly six years ago, “ Alcohol last week killed one more major league baseball player than steroids ever have.” I referred to the automobile fatality of Josh Hancock, a St. Louis Cardinals’ pitcher, whom the club knew to be a frequent and a heavy drinker. Carlton Fisk was a lot luckier than Hancock. The Hall of Fame catcher recently pleaded guilty to drunk driving two months after police found him asleep in his pickup truck in a cornfield in a Chicago suburb. The 65-year-old Fisk wasn’t there resting up for a game in the field of dreams. In probably the most interesting piece of the hundreds of thousands of words that have been written about the Hall of Fame election and the writers’ rejection of known and suspected steroids users, the Associated Press quoted several Hall of Fame players as welcoming the writers’ shutout of Barry Bonds and Roger Clemens, among others. “I’m kind of glad that nobody got in this year,” Al Kaline said. “I feel honored to be in the Hall of Fame. And I would’ve felt a little uneasy sitting up there on the stage, listening to some of these new guys talk about how great they were.” Rich (Goose) Gossage had previously been quoted as saying players who used steroids should not be in the Hall of Fame, and he didn’t alter his position post-vote. “I think the steroids guys that are under suspicion got too many votes,” he said. “I don’t know why they’re making this such a question and why there’ s so much debate. To me, they cheated. Are we going to reward these guys?” The players the AP talked to didn’t mention Fisk and most likely weren’t asked about his transgression. But most Hall of Famers have been sitting on the Cooperstown stage with him since he was elected in 2000 and probably will again this coming July or in future Julys. Why will Fisk’s DUI not make him a pariah in their midst? I can guess the answer they would give if they were asked. Drinking is legal. It isn’t cheating. It doesn’t enhance performance. It doesn’t create an unbalanced playing field. And one answer they wouldn’t articulate: There but for the grace of G-d go I. On the heels of Fisk’s guilty plea, which got him a year of court supervision and drug and alcohol evaluation and counseling, another former all-star player resurfaced in the same arena. Mark Grace was participating in the Arizona Diamondbacks’ fantasy camp even though the team had fired him as its television analyst after he was arrested last August, the second time in 15 months he was arrested for drunk driving. He pleaded not guilty to four felony counts of aggravated DUI and is scheduled for trial March 19. Fisk and Grace, of course, are retired players no longer subject to the authority of the baseball commissioner. But there are enough DUI subjects still in baseball to wonder what’s going on: Miguel Cabrera, Coco Crisp, Derek Lowe, Austin Kearns, Adam Kennedy, Shin-Soo Choo, Michael Pineda, Bobby Jenks, Joba Chamberlain, Cristhian Martinez, Alex White and assorted minor leaguers. “You’re right; we focus on steroids and amphetamines, which have been around for 100 years,” Commissioner Bud Selig said in a telephone interview in response to a statement I made about alcohol. “But alcohol is a very serious situation. I’m very sensitive about that.” Although appearances might make it seem that baseball has ignored alcohol, it has not, though results have not been noticeable publicly. “We negotiated changes in how alcohol is dealt with in the last round of collective bargaining,” Michael Weiner, the head of the union, said, referring to the labor contract that took effect 13 months ago. “The doctors have always dealt with alcohol issues, players who have alcohol issues or have potential issues with other things.” One change Weiner cited requires a player who is charged with DUI to meet with Major League Baseball’s joint treatment board, which consists of one doctor and one lawyer from each side. Alcohol matters are covered in Attachment 27, which was added to the basic agreement between the clubs and the union. It states: “…the parties have agreed to establish a Joint Treatment Program to deal with certain alcohol-related conduct and off-field violent conduct by Major League Players during the term of the 2012-2016 Basic Agreement.” The last paragraph of the page-and-a-half attachment declares that a player’ s participation in a treatment program is voluntary and that refusal to participate does not subject the player to discipline. At the same time, it says, a player’s referral to the treatment board does not preclude the club from taking disciplinary action. The treatment board, Weiner explained, determines “whether players can benefit from a treatment program or not, with the recognition that a lot of people who are charged with alcohol-related crimes were caught making a mistake and don’t have alcohol-related problems.” Cabrera, last season’s American League most valuable player, was not one of those “caught making a mistake.” A year and a half apart he had two incidents that brought him in contact with the police. Hours before the start of the Tigers’ final series of the 2009 season, Cabrera wound up in jail after an alcohol-induced fight with his wife. The incident very likely cost the Tigers the division title, which they lost in a playoff game to Minnesota. Two Februarys later, on the eve of the start of spring training, Cabrera was pulled over in Florida and charged with DUI. After the first incident, he underwent outpatient treatment. After the second, he was assigned a monitor for the entire 2011 season. The Tigers, though, did not discipline Cabrera. When I asked a Tigers’ spokesman about the absence of disciplinary action, he said that was up to the commissioner’s office. When I asked Selig, he said, “I normally leave these things to the clubs, but you raise a very good point. If the club isn’t doing enough, then I have to get involved.” As far as I know, the Cardinals did nothing in 2007 when its manager, Tony La Russa, was arrested in Florida during spring training for driving under the influence. Police found him asleep at the wheel at an intersection in Jupiter near the St. Louis training camp. After La Russa pleaded guilty in November to drunk driving, the team’s principal owner, Bill DeWitt Jr. declined to comment, saying, “We addressed this matter with Tony last season and the nature of those discussions will remain private.” The matter, he added, was closed. The Pittsburgh Pirates apparently did nothing after their president, Frank Coonelly, who previously was a labor lawyer in the commissioner’s office, was arrested in December 2011. News of the arrest didn’t even surface for two months. Coonelly was charged with DUI, careless driving and driving the wrong way. He subsequently apologized, calling his actions “irresponsible and wrong.” But he offered no explanation for hiding the arrest for two months. And then there is Matt Bush, who has surpassed Josh Hamilton in killing his career. An unemployed pitcher who was a high school shortstop when San Diego made him the No. 1 pick in the 2004 draft, Bush has hit the jackpot. He has turned his third DUI conviction in 10 years into a 51-month prison sentence. Bush, 26, completed his baseball destruction last March when he ran over a motorcycle – with the 72-year-old motorcyclist on it –and kept going, telling police after he was arrested that he didn’t remember hitting anything or anybody. Hamilton, the 2010 American League most valuable player, squandered four years as he struggled to overcome alcohol and drug demons. Bush will very likely spend that much time in prison. Besides their drinking problems, the two players have one thing in common. Both were in the Rays organization. Hamilton, however, found life after the Rays. For Bush, life after the Rays, who released him last October, is prison. -- ※ 發信站: 批踢踢實業坊(ptt.cc) ◆ From: 140.112.25.133

01/22 12:21, , 1F
David Wells:
01/22 12:21, 1F

01/22 12:23, , 2F
克里夫蘭的蚊子:
01/22 12:23, 2F

01/22 12:24, , 3F
DUI 也要管那要不要管打老婆? 到底是棒球聯盟還是童子軍
01/22 12:24, 3F

01/22 12:35, , 4F
David Wells:還好我退休了
01/22 12:35, 4F

01/22 13:18, , 5F
最後變成大聯盟球員晚上10點就必須睡覺 早上六點起床
01/22 13:18, 5F

01/22 13:51, , 6F
還要早點名唱隊歌
01/22 13:51, 6F

01/22 14:07, , 7F
現在是回到70年代的禁酒令嗎?
01/22 14:07, 7F

01/22 14:42, , 8F
10點澡都還沒洗好吧
01/22 14:42, 8F

01/22 15:18, , 9F
10點還在球場吧
01/22 15:18, 9F

01/22 15:57, , 10F
那大樹和無尾熊也要管了???
01/22 15:57, 10F

01/22 16:12, , 11F
要不要規定帶手帕衛生紙 順便每天提醒好了
01/22 16:12, 11F

01/22 17:59, , 12F
1五查
01/22 17:59, 12F

01/22 18:56, , 13F
內務櫃要擺放整齊 釘鞋對齊同一條線
01/22 18:56, 13F

01/22 19:25, , 14F
球員宿舍還要值夜更
01/22 19:25, 14F

01/22 21:47, , 15F
值夜更還要背守則 球團高層會不定期派人查哨督導
01/22 21:47, 15F

01/22 21:48, , 16F
每週一三五要到球場升旗,檢查服裝儀容
01/22 21:48, 16F

01/22 23:08, , 17F
樓上都是老兵 XD
01/22 23:08, 17F

01/23 00:50, , 18F
還要輪流背值星
01/23 00:50, 18F

01/23 02:24, , 19F
要發不喝酒小卡了
01/23 02:24, 19F

01/23 05:55, , 20F
唱國歌前裁判要去量體溫,每半局攻守交換時要列隊集合喝水
01/23 05:55, 20F

01/23 18:33, , 21F
喝水前要水壺舉高念報告詞 喝完要將喝水小卡填至定位
01/23 18:33, 21F

11/02 08:15, , 22F
10點還在球場吧 https://noxiv.com
11/02 08:15, 22F
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