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I watched Sportcenter last night and was shown Barry from his start in the majors until today. He started at about 180 pounds and is about 6'2" in the last five years he has gained about 35 pounds of muscle.
That should put him at about 215. I'm 6'2", and when I played hockey three times a week I weighed 215. Knowing how I looked then, and looking at Bonds now, I'd say he's closer to 250. Which would mean he's added about 70lbs of muscle. He's built like a linebacker, and a stout linebacker at that. If anything, I'm probably underestimating his weight.
I agree with you wholeheartedly on this Flish. MLB's drug policies are a joke. I'm curious to see what would happen if it were proven to a reasonable degree of certainty that Bonds et al did buy and use some form of performance enhancing drugs over the years. There's no doubt in my mind that Mark McGwire used steroids. He presented
every visible symptom of steroid abuse.
But I don't think MLB will ever do anything serious about the matter. Steroids = more offense = more excitement = more money for all concerned. There's been such an offensive explosion since 1994, that I think its about time they raised the pitcher's mound back to its original height to give pitchers a little more of a chance.
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The day you begin a work out regimen even remotely similar to his, you can open your ignorant mouth and speculate all you want.
Regardless of his work out regimen, nobody ever, in the history of any sport has, at what should be the end of his career, when his numbers are supposed to start dwindling, suddenly produced the greatest offensive explosion by a single player ever. If you don't find that suspicious, I have some nice beachfront land in Arizona you might want to look at.
From the artcile you linked:
The home run record was 24 when Ruth hit 29 in 1919, and then he hit 54 the next year (more than every other team but one) and 59 the next. Steroids didn't even exist then -- there goes Jeff Kent's theory -- yet Ruth more than doubled the record in three years. How was that possible? Because they went to a better baseball and because Ruth was just about the only player that consistently tried to hit home runs. Prior to Ruth the baseball players had the 'small ball' mentality - make contact, move the runner, and above all DON'T STRIKE OUT. Ruth changed that. Once people saw what Ruth did, others followed in his wake (Foxx, Gehrig, Al Simmons, etc).
Other than 1961, Roger Maris only twice hit as many as 30 home runs in a season, and he never hit as many as 40. So how did he hit 61 in that magical 1961 season? Short right field, pull hitter in a power packed line up. Why did he never come close before? Because he had only played one season prior to 1961 in Yankee Stadium. Why did he never do it after? Because he was so constantly hounded by the press, and treated so horribly by so many people that he never wanted to do it again.
And while you're answering those questions, kindly explain how Davey Johnson hit five home runs in 1972, and then hit 43 in 1973 but just 31 the remainder of his career. And tell me how Kirby Puckett hit four home runs in his first 1,251 at-bats and then suddenly hit 31 in his third season. And then tell me how Gary Gaetti could hit 21 home runs in 584 at-bats in 1983, then hit just five in 588 at-bats in 1984 and then hit 20 in 560 at-bats in 1985 (and you might as well tell Gary as well, because he has never figured it out himself). Cause they got lucky? Because sometimes people just have a great season? Because there are such things as wild variations in performance? Hell, one year playing in a men's league I hit .818!! And this was after not having played for ten years, and against some pretty good pitchers (college and minor leaguers included). The next year I hit .488 and then barely managed to hit .250 the year after that.
But none of this can explain why Bonds suddenly got great at the age when most people are looking to finish out thier careers and retire.
Need some more proof that performance levels can vary wildly? Here's another tidbit from your article.
Garth Brooks finished spring training with nearly as high a batting average (.143) as Ken Griffey Jr. (.158). Edited, Wed Apr 14 09:34:55 2004 by Deathwysh