This is HGH! and world SERIES!
By Alan Schwarz
Tags: George J. Mitchell, roger clemens
Live Video: The Hearings
Text: Clemenss Statement
Text: McNamees Statement
The New York Timess Alan Schwarz is in the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee room and will be providing analysis and updates throughout todays hearing.
(Excerpt)
11:03 a.m. ET
Duff Wilson, also here in the meeting room, reports: Roger Clemens said Andy Pettitte misremembers the 1999 or 2000 conversations the two men had regarding H.G.H. Mr. Pettitte told Congressional staff members that Mr. Clemens told him then that he used H.G.H.
Mr. Clemens, in his sworn testimony, said he had been talking about a television show about three aging men who used H.G.H. and had a better quality of life. Mr. Pettitte and his wife both gave affidavits about the conversation. Mr. Pettitte said he told his wife about it shortly after the conversation he had with Mr. Clemens.
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I’ve been listening to this for about an hour, or so. Roger isn’t doing well....
I’m listening to streaming video (not watching). Couldn’t handle looking up Waxman’s nose......
As devoted fans of Major League Baseball,we at FanStrike.net demand that team owners and the Major League Players Union take the following actions:
As devoted, passionate, well-meaningÂfans of MajorÂLeague Baseball,ÂweÂcommitÂto take the following actions in order to ensure that the demands enumerated above are met:
It is up to us fans to save our game. I personally think that Major League baseball is worth saving.ÂIf we fans as consumers sit idly by and do nothing to demand that baseball clean up its act, weÂasÂconsumers of the Major LeagueÂBaseballÂproduct are complicit in propagating professional baseball’s steroid culture. A lot is at stake here. IfÂnothing is done to change baseball immediately,Âprofessional baseball’s entire credibility will be shot.ÂThe home run record numbers of 73 and 762 already hold no credibilityÂfor me. For this baseball fan, if nothing is done to clean up baseball’s steroid mess, Major League Baseball is in danger of becoming a discredited performance enhancing freak show not at all unlike those Mr. Universe, Worlds Strongest Man, Longest Drive, and WWE professional wrestling competitions you occasionally see on television late at night.
Performance enhancing drugs have no place in baseball. We fans need to put some positiveÂECONOMIC pressure on the Major League Players Union, the franchise owners, the radio and television networks, and the individual players themselves to help ensure that Major League Baseball regain its former credibility, consistency, and position of importance in American culture. We need to save our great national game.
If you have any questions, comments, or suggestions, feel free to contact me, Leo McNellis, at lmcnellis@fanstrike.net.
As devoted fans of Major League Baseball,we at FanStrike.net demand that team owners and the Major League Players Union take the following actions:
As devoted, passionate, well-meaningÂfans of MajorÂLeague Baseball,ÂweÂcommitÂto take the following actions in order to ensure that the demands enumerated above are met:
It is up to us fans to save our game. I personally think that Major League baseball is worth saving.ÂIf we fans as consumers sit idly by and do nothing to demand that baseball clean up its act, weÂasÂconsumers of the Major LeagueÂBaseballÂproduct are complicit in propagating professional baseball’s steroid culture. A lot is at stake here. IfÂnothing is done to change baseball immediately,Âprofessional baseball’s entire credibility will be shot.ÂThe home run record numbers of 73 and 762 already hold no credibilityÂfor me. For this baseball fan, if nothing is done to clean up baseball’s steroid mess, Major League Baseball is in danger of becoming a discredited performance enhancing freak show not at all unlike those Mr. Universe, Worlds Strongest Man, Longest Drive, and WWE professional wrestling competitions you occasionally see on television late at night.
Performance enhancing drugs have no place in baseball. We fans need to put some positiveÂECONOMIC pressure on the Major League Players Union, the franchise owners, the radio and television networks, and the individual players themselves to help ensure that Major League Baseball regain its former credibility, consistency, and position of importance in American culture. We need to save our great national game.
Burton was pretty tough on McNamee!
This must be very important compared to Iraq, the Recession, USA schools placing 15th in science, math, etc.
I watched a good bit of this and the main fact coming through is that we have a lame duck Rat run congress.
The attempt to apear relevant is comical.
W will accomplish more
Why the #$%&! are members of Congress wasting their time on this drivel? WHO CARES if ball players are pumping themselves full of steroids? Nobody is forcing anyone to buy tickets to these games or watch them on TV. And nobody is forcing parents to raise their kids to worship major league sports and athletes. We’ve got dangerous conflicts going on all around world, nutcase governments in Iran and NK building nuclear weapons, and global economic crisis, and our congressional representatives are sitting around talking about BALL PLAYERS!!
Clemens was not a good witness. Shifting his eyes back and forth, stumbling over words, licking his lips constantly, he did not inspire credibility.
Frankly, I found McNamee more credible, especially with the admissions of Pettitte and Knoblauch.