Jerlins wrote:There are plenty of cheaters in the HOF already, be it by corked bats, scuffed or altered balls, greenies, , spitballs, air conditioning being turned off and on depending on who's at bat, and on and on. I get tired of the debate that steroids is cheating and anyone taking them should be banned from the HOF. Or is it ok to cheat depending on the degree of severity? I'm probably in the 1% minority that feels that way. I am not a fan of either Bonds or Clemens, but IMO both belong in. If Bonds played in an era where 50% were users, and Aaron played in an era where only 2% were using Greenies, who had the greater advantage? And please don't tell me steroids gives a greater advantage, because I am quite aware of what advantage using uppers can give oneself.
As Bombers said, just because cheaters have been inducted before doesn't mean we should let them all in. You don't correct past mistakes by entirely relenting and repeating them. Also, what past inductees have been proven cheaters or had substantial evidence of it brought against them? I believe there could be some, but I am curious.
Also, I would say that, while degrees of severity shouldn't be used to justify lesser cheating, it is a factor to consider. If a player unknowingly applies a bit too much pine tar on his bat for some at-bats, or a pitcher inadvertently goes to his mouth, he technically cheated. However, he shouldn't be banned from the HOF for it. However, as I said earlier, those cheating with steroids immensely impacted the game and harmed its integrity with their usage. They took wins away from teams with fewer or no roiding players. They robbed players like Maris and Aaron of honestly and diligently earned records. And they cost non-using players money in contract and arbitration negotiations because their statistics paled in comparison to the roiders. So the roiders
did do significant harm with their cheating and don't belong in the HOF.
As to the greenies vs. PED argument, I'm not touching it. I'm not even close to a chemist, and unless one of the potencies was negligible, their respective potencies are irrelevant.