tzill
Lefty 99
Thanks for proving my point.
Ummm...if you had a "point," it certainly wasn't "proven." Back to Logic 101 class for you.
Thanks for proving my point.
The same reason Bonds or any of the others did...misinformation. Remember, corollary isn't causation.
Ummm...if you had a "point," it certainly wasn't "proven." Back to Logic 101 class for you.
You should probably send a memo down to the Giants since this sort of misinformation was still present in your clubhouse last year.
You came up with a whole two names. Impressive indeed!
You've been given the option to become informed. Either do, or don't. But if you won't, I've no time for you.
Dude, just quit while you're behind. You sound like a 14 year-old.
I'll do you a solid -- here's a definitive analysis of steroids and baseball. Read it, and then come back to the board to discuss the topic.
Steroids, Other "Drugs", and Baseball
Walker's work needs some vetting. Generally, I agree that the impact of steroids on HR totals in the 90's is way over blown, but I'm also firmly convinced, for a variety of reasons, that increased lean mass helps you hit balls harder/farther - all else being equal. The question for me, with a nod to diminishing returns, is how much muscle mass is really needed, and can you achieve this incremental increase in mass without steroids, i.e. with home runs, you're "competing" against a "fixed" threshold, not other athletes whose performances are similarly increasing. Like most subjects, the more you know, the less sure you are that you know enough to give a definitive answer.
I've suspected this for some time, and Walker's work confirms it.
But the science seems to indicate pretty unequivocally that steroids build upper body mass much much more than lower body mass.
The majority of hitting is lower body strength and thus steroids don't do too much to help.
The two spikes in Bond's HR production are easily explained by 1. the juicing of baseballs in 1987 and 2. SSS deviation in 2001 (the 73 home run year). As Walker shows, the same thing happened to Maris in 61 -- and we can be pretty confident he didn't use steroids then. As he explains, any career of decent length produces an outlier year or two (a career year and a crap the bed year, if you will).
I guess the main point is that the ASSUMPTION that steroids help batters hit (or pitchers pitch) is flawed and that the likely effects are minimal.
Which part? You think Barry Bonds and/or Roger Clemens wouldn't have been in the HOF if not for PEDs?
I think it's the: "if you don't agree with me, you're not a real fan" fallacy that he's objecting to.
Dude, just quit while you're behind. You sound like a 14 year-old.
I'll do you a solid -- here's a definitive analysis of steroids and baseball. Read it, and then come back to the board to discuss the topic.
Steroids, Other "Drugs", and Baseball
Roiders don't belong. Period. That's just my view. Take it or leave it. I know many disagree and that's fine.
With all the gray area and arguments to be made on the issue, I don't see how opinions on this will ever be consistent among baseball fans.
Roiders don't belong. Period. That's just my view. Take it or leave it. I know many disagree and that's fine.
With all the gray area and arguments to be made on the issue, I don't see how opinions on this will ever be consistent among baseball fans.
Roiders don't belong. Period. That's just my view. Take it or leave it. I know many disagree and that's fine.
With all the gray area and arguments to be made on the issue, I don't see how opinions on this will ever be consistent among baseball fans.
Read an article I agree with or GTFO?
The two spikes in Bond's HR production are easily explained by 1. the juicing of baseballs in 1987 and 2. SSS deviation in 2001 (the 73 home run year). As Walker shows, the same thing happened to Maris in 61 -- and we can be pretty confident he didn't use steroids then. As he explains, any career of decent length produces an outlier year or two (a career year and a crap the bed year, if you will).
The current history of anabolic steroids as abusable drugs
began in 1954 among Olympic weightlifters.(1,2,4)
In 1956, Dianabol (Methandrostenolone) was first marketed in the
United States, clearing the way for the use of anabolics by U. S.
athletes.
Anadrol\50 - If you value your hair, don't touch this one with a ten foot pole. Nothing seems to control its negative effects on hair. Not Proscar, Not Nizoral, nothing...
Dianabol -Same as Anadrol\50.
Maris was perceived as surly during his time on the Yankees.
It is said, however, that the stress of pursuing the record was so great for Maris that his hair occasionally fell out in clumps during the season.