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The radically different treatment Roger Clemens and Barry Bonds have received about alleged drug use is a racist double standard.

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Bonds Roasts, Clemens Coasts

By Earl Ofari Hutchinson, AlterNet. Posted December 20, 2007.


The radically different treatment Roger Clemens and Barry Bonds have received about alleged drug use is a racist double standard.
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Boston Red Sox star pitcher Curt Schilling put it bluntly to Roger Clemens: Prove your innocence or cough up four Cy Young awards. It was a big, brash, and bold challenge to the icon pitcher. But so far Schilling has been one of the few within or without baseball to make that challenge.

When the Mitchell Report fingered Clemens as the biggest name suspected chemical performance juicer, outside of Barry Bonds, and shoved him to the top of its A list of offenders, the by now all too familiar double standard quickly kicked in with a vengeance. That is that a venerated white superstar gets a free pass from the bash and blame from the media, the public and the sportswriters when accused of bad or criminal behavior, while a scorned and shunned black superstar gets pounded for the same dubious behavior. The Clemens and Barry Bonds treatment proved that.

The legion of talking head analysts, sportswriters and commentators, and packs of fans did their patented twists and vaults to nitpick, niggle at, downplay, or flat out apologize for Clemens. The hard core Clemens apologists branded the report a tissue of gossip, hearsay, unsubstantiated testimony, and a cheap ploy to grab headlines. The few fans and writers that had the temerity to pound Clemens for cheating drew an equally predictable torrent of angry rebuttals, dodges and apologies.

Clemens quickly sniffed that the how-dare-you-speak-ill-of-our-hero wind was blowing at gale force and played the persecuted wronged babe in the woods victim. The equally predictable one day in and then out rule came into play with Clemens. The rule put simply is that allegations of or real misdeeds by or about white superstars draw a CNN headline, gets the tongues wagging, and a bit of press ink for one day. Then they quickly disappear from the news and just as quickly from the public's radar scope. The offender is not rehabilitated he's just forgotten. If not for Schilling's demand that Clemens come clean, that almost certainly would have been the case with Clemens too.

That brings me to Bonds. The Clemens apologists frothed at the mere hint that there is a double standard in the kid glove treatment of Clemens and the relentless flogging of Bonds. They turn twists and vaults to prove the difference. Clemens didn't lie to a grand jury. The allegations against him are unproven. He was a good role model for the game. All are patent nonsense. He didn't lie to a grand jury because he wasn't hauled in front of one and compelled to testify. That's even not a valid rationale to let anyone off the culpability hook. If someone participates in a crime and they keep their trap shut about it they are just as guilty. The allegations against Bonds until he's convicted of the charges of lying about steroid use or makes a public admission that he used them are just that, allegations. As for the clean Roger image, and the bad guy Bonds image, Mike Piazza can best answer that one. Clemens in a pique threw a shattered bat at him. Bonds has never physically attacked another player.

Even after the Mitchell Report named names, lots of them, that didn't take the focus or the heat off of Bonds. The other names were dismissed as a motley collection of washed up has beens, no-names, and bit players who added little to the game. The names that anyone really paid any attention to were Clemens and, of course, Bonds. But even with the finger of suspicion momentarily pointed at Clemens there was never any real danger that he would topple Bonds from his rarified perch as MLB's and the fan's public enemy number.

Schillings in his challenge to Clemens to prove his innocence also gave him a way out. He advised him to assemble a legal team and demand that Mitchell proof the allegations. If he can't then he suggested that he demand an apology and a retraction. That was a charitable way of giving Clemens the benefit of the doubt. There is no record that Schilling extended the same charity to Bonds. There was no talk of Bonds assembling a legal team to demand hard proof of steroid use, and if none were found demanding an apology and retraction of the charges against him. Neither Schilling nor any MLB player has given any public hint that they'll be in court to give support to Bonds when his day in the docket eventually comes because they believe that as Clemens he is also innocent until proven guilty.

No matter how many reports and articles alleging junk use in the MLB are written. No matter how many timid and weak fingers of suspicion are pointed at Clemens, and the other suspected chemically juiced up players, the fact remains, and will remain, that Bonds is the only ball player that has taken the full fall for the sins of MLB. That's no real challenge to Clemens or baseball, let alone disproves there's a harsh double-standard treatment of Bonds.

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See more stories tagged with: baseball, mlb, roger clemens, barry bonds, steroids

Earl Ofari Hutchinson is an author and political analyst. His new book is The Latino Challenge to Black America: Towards a Conversation between African-Americans and Hispanics (Middle Passage Press and Hispanic Economics New York).

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You Are Taking Sides
Posted by: hole11 on Dec 20, 2007 5:50 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Why should we prosecute everyone for their actions? I know plenty of people in high school that took steroids. Should they be prosecuted. They are cops now. Does that make it worse? Does it make it worse that there will be more blacks prosecuted than whites?

I don't know. I don't like watching sports. If I played a person who used steroids or hgh I wouldn't really care. It's all about having fun. They couldn't beat me in chess anyways.

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» RE: You Are Taking Drugs Posted by: yellow
I agree no double standards.
Posted by: Camilla Cracchiolo on Dec 20, 2007 10:53 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It just sucks that a white player would be let off the hook while a black player is held to a different standard. "Performance enhancement drug" use really is a more complex issue, tho.

To look at Bonds, it seems pretty clear that he is suffering from the adverse health effects of human growth hormone.

All these drugs have dangerous side effects, ranging from acromegaly (in Bonds' case) to cancer, impotence, rage outbreaks, heart disease, etc. with androgens. These effects are often permanent and can be life threatening. And ultimately things like HGH can weaken the ligaments and destroy the physical ablility the player is taking them for.

If we were to allow their free use, immediately players would come under incredible pressure by the owners of the teams to damage their health (even further than the sports already demand, that is. Look at poor Shaq, who will probably never walk without pain again in his life).

I don't want the athletes punished. I want them protected. There's a guy at my husband's job who thinks any criticism of a black player for using this stuff constitutes racism. I don't agree. It's racism if a black player is flagellated while a white guy gets off the hook. But I think all players deserve some compassion from the fans and should be helped and protected, black and white.

Who should get punished are the agents, trainers and yes, the team owners who turn their heads away while raking in huge profits off these guys destroying their health.

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Play fair
Posted by: sliver on Dec 20, 2007 11:32 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This article is opinion on steroids. It takes a weak little truth and expands it to unbelivable proportions.

Sure, there is racism in the treatment of Bonds, but you have to play fair. We knew Bonds had admitted to using steriods while he was chasing the home run record. The continual beatdown was because he was hitting home runs every week. Every home run meant another minute on the sports news, and another reminder that without steroids, his career would have been over years ago. If a white player were in the same situation, he would have gotten almost the same treatment, I guarantee it. Yes, Bonds got it worse because he is black. How much worse is the question. To give it a figure, I would guess 30 to 50 percent worse. Earl Ofari Hutchinson seems to think that it is 1,000 percent worse.

If Clemens plays next year, I expect him to be on the news every time he pitches, with the same reminders that he took steroids. But he's not chasing the greatest record in baseball, so there won't be as much coverage.

You can only compare players in similar situations, and these are too different. If Clemens gets voted into the Hall of Fame on the first vote, but Bonds doesn't, then you have a point. That would be a fair comparison.

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» RE: Play fair (Good Post) Posted by: jmooney
View from the "Second City"
Posted by: pm58 on Dec 21, 2007 6:18 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
With all due respect to the author's point of view, having lived in Chicago all my life, I have observed that the national sports media is centered in New York City. It is no wonder to me that Mr. Clemens, who helped the Yankees win a world series and played under the very noses of the "esteemed Eastern Establishment" press, is being given the benefit of the doubt. I think that if Mr. Bonds had helped the Yankees or Mets win a few championships his treatment in the national press would have been far different. I would submit that there is indeed prejudice tainting this story but it has very little to do with race and a great deal to do with where each of these individuals has played.

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» RE: View from the "Second City" Posted by: penobscotdziekuje@yahoo.com
A mixture of racism and profit-mongering
Posted by: www.suekatz.com on Dec 21, 2007 6:45 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thank you for this piece. I'm no baseball expert (I write about sex, politics, but rarely sport, actually), but the onslaught against Bonds combined with the high financial stakes of this major-league business explain the ugly injustice of the mainstream coverage.

When I've asked people why the hate of Bonds when the trainers, managers and owners are clearly pressuring many of the players to pump up (pump up their profits, that is), the answer is often something about Bonds being "unpleasant". Hmmm. I wonder how pleasant any schmuck would be when facing the unified vilification of the media and baseball world. Once again the athletes are taking the heat when those in charge of their fitness and performance remain in the shadows.

Race underscores American judgements - as does gender - in all sports. Let's not forget how the Williams sisters were treated by the tennis establishment at the start of their brilliant careers.

Thanks again,
www.suekatz.com

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» RE: A mixture of racism and profit-mongering Posted by: penobscotdziekuje@yahoo.com
It's always racism
Posted by: lamar on Dec 21, 2007 8:33 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It couldn't have anything to do with Bonds' noted disdain for the fans, refusal to license his name or freely give out autographs. It simply must be racism.

Being a bad guy or a good guy has nothing to do with a single act of 'roid rage. It has to do with whether the fans perceive the player as grateful for what he has. Clemens is a prick, and Bonds is a prick, but Clemens was usually smart enough to hide it and be grateful.

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Wanna know what I think?
Posted by: willymack on Dec 21, 2007 10:34 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Well, I'm gonna tell you anyway. All, and I mean ALL professional athletes should tell the sanctimonious commissioners that what they put into their bodies is their own business and theirs alone. They're paid to give us a good show of atheletic prowess. They're in the entertainment business, and were NEVER given the job of moral exemplars. The old saw about them being role models for our children to emulate is so much fertilizer. PARENTS are the ones with that job.

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Oh, please -- not the race card again
Posted by: wavydavy on Dec 21, 2007 2:42 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Poor, persecuted Barry Bonds, he's being treated MUCH worse than Clemens, and it's all because he's black and Clemens is white.

BULLSHIT!

First of all, they are not being treated significantly differently. A Google search for "'Barry Bonds' +steroids" yields 445,000 web hits and 9,625 news hits. Replace "Barry Bonds" with "Roger Clemens"? 419,000 web hits and 8,765 news hits. OMG, Clemens has less than 95% as many web hits as Bonds, and less than 92% as many news hits. That kind of disparity proves that everyone in America is a racist. What other reason would there be for Bonds to be mentioned a massive 6-9% more often than Clemens?

Second, Bonds has been in the news re steroids since BALCO investigation stories first began -- in June 2003! Clemens was first mentioned in this context (as a news story, not as speculation) about a week ago, when the Mitchell report was issued. How come Clemens has been in the news re steroids only 0.4% as long as Bonds, yet he has received 90%+ of news coverage? Clemens has received 419,000 mentions in one week; Bonds 445,000 hits in 234 weeks. Factually, CLEMENS is the one getting the most press.

Third, Bonds was chasing, and then broke, the two most hallowed records in baseball -- home runs in a season, and in a career. Maybe THAT increased his coverage? OTOH, Clemens has been chasing exactly what record? It's not wins (he has 347; needs another 164), strikeouts (he has 4,675; needs another 1,042), shutouts (he has 46; needs another 64, and he would have to pass 25 other pitchers), or ERA (he is currently tied for 208th place all-time).

Fourth, Bonds plays every day because he is a position player. Clemens, OTOH, plays every 5th day (or less) because he is a pitcher. So, there would be about 5x as many opportunities to write about Bonds, just in game coverage.

Finally, Bonds is an unmitigated asshole. He is a rude, surly, offensive, self-pitying jerk, who feels that being rude, surly, and offensive is a good game plan for someone trying to court the attention of the fans and the media. Clemens is also an unmitigated asshole (e.g., throwing a baseball and later a bat at Mike Piazaa), but he has learned how to play the PR game, so he gets somewhat more favorable treatment by the media BECAUSE HE TREATS THEM BETTER.

This is at least the 2nd post this week on AlterNet about how racist everyone is because they pick on poor, beleaguered Barry Bonds. The previous one even made Bonds out to be some sort of civil rights hero since he is persecuted because "he doesn't play by Whitey's rules" (paraphrase). This is just complete nonsense.

Look, I am well aware of the latent and overt racism still part of American society and culture; it is part of the subtext of every interpersonal transaction. I have had many, many personal encounters with it, at least partly because I am white and my wife of 15 years is black. But give me a break. Barry Bonds is about as black, and as much of a civil rights leader, as O.J. Simpson. Like Simpson, he was never part of the black community - he grew up in a mostly-white suburb of San Francisco; he has never indicated the slightest interest in racial causes; his best friend, first wife, and former mistress are all white.

This kind of article actually sets back the cause of equal rights because it is just a variation of the "boy who cried wolf". The more we hear "racist, racist, racist" every time there is any issue involving a black person, the less likely the public is to believe it when it actually IS true (and there is no shortage of those stories, unfortunately).

Furthermore, this article is so fact-free that it could have been an article written by the White House on Iraq's WMDs. I thought this site was part of the "reality-based community". Guess I was wrong.

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It's ROIDger Clemens, Not Roger
Posted by: Biko on Dec 21, 2007 9:41 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Let's also see if all the tee-shirts and posters at games are present for Roidger, as they were for Bonds, Vick and the like?

Or, shall white privilege and heroes for white kids prevail over 'equality' and justice, as usual in the "free" world.

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Earl, enough already
Posted by: reevolve on Dec 21, 2007 9:47 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is your 6th column in a little more than a month about how unfairly black professional athletes are treated. Is there really no more important issue in the world?

Yawn.

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