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To: Sabertooth
A bloated and unwelcome record. The balls are juiced, the parks are small, and the strikezones tiny. If it continues, baseball will be unrecognizable.
14 posted on 10/07/2001 1:50:19 PM PDT by ForOurFuture
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To: ForOurFuture
I'm waiting for next year with someone to have stats like this: 230 H, 57 2B 84 HR, 187 RBI, 212 R, 1.094 SLG, .386 BA

What a joke.
17 posted on 10/07/2001 1:52:22 PM PDT by Conservative til I die
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To: ForOurFuture
I agree big time. You forgot to mention the sorry-a$$ pitching as well. Barry can be smug until this time next year when someone else hits 80.
26 posted on 10/07/2001 2:01:58 PM PDT by freeplancer
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To: ForOurFuture
In 1930 the league batting averages were around .300 and the leagie ERAs were near 5.00. It didn't distort baseball then. I doubt this rash of broken HR records will do so either.
38 posted on 10/07/2001 2:20:54 PM PDT by Celtjew Libertarian
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To: ForOurFuture
A bloated and unwelcome record. The balls are juiced, the parks are small, and the strikezones tiny. If it continues, baseball will be unrecognizable.

Those are all good points. The Powers of Baseball That Be decided after the strike in the mid-90s that cancelled part of a season and the playoffs and World Series, and made baseball anathema, that something had to be done to win back the fans. So, they juiced up the ball and did all those other things.

It isn't just Bond's 73 homers, but how many guys are hitting 50+ homers now in a single season. It used to be getting 50 was a significant feat.

But in Bonds case there is another factor, too: The new Pac Bell stadium. Candlestick had all those swirling winds, some of which were strong enough to blow Juan Marichel off the mound (remember that? ;-) ). Are the winds in Pac Bell different? Just asking, as that could be a factor, too.

44 posted on 10/07/2001 2:26:48 PM PDT by Jay W
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To: ForOurFuture
A bloated and unwelcome record. The balls are juiced, the parks are small, and the strikezones tiny. If it continues, baseball will be unrecognizable.

I have to agree with you. I wouldn't be surrised to see someone hit 100 in the near future. This is what I call "Television Ball." Nobody really cares about the game anymore. Just get the money.

108 posted on 10/07/2001 5:31:54 PM PDT by saminfl
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To: ForOurFuture
A bloated and unwelcome record. The balls are juiced . . .

Oh, bull. Everybody in baseball would be hitting 30+ homers a year if the ball was juiced. If you want to compare balls, parks, or eras, be my guest. With the swing he has this season, Barry would have hit 83+ in the Ruth or Marris era, easy. 450 ft. is 450 ft., now or then.

What you are missing is that modern athletes have a huge edge in nutrition (from birth on) and access to technology to study and improve their game. The Bonds swing of 10 years ago is very different from the poetry he strokes today.

Barry has studied and worked hard to refine his craft. He is your master. Viva Bonds!

121 posted on 10/07/2001 6:30:58 PM PDT by RainDog
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To: ForOurFuture
please prove that the balls are 'juiced'. assuming don't get it. put up or shut up! let's see you face randy johnson!
133 posted on 10/07/2001 8:25:47 PM PDT by rockfish59
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