My first example of steroids adding entertainment is the home run chase between Mark Mcgwire and Sammy Sosa in 1998. This marked the return of baseball as an exciting sport because you saw two power houses going for the single season home run record and they were going hit for hit until the last game. In the end Sammy Sosa won it and the country was on fire with all the home runs that it seemed hard that anything could make people hate that time. Then it came out that both players had used steroids and now everyone says how horrible that is. It's not horrible, people enjoyed it and had a great time with it, so who cares if they juiced? It's just a game isn't it?
Sunday, December 11, 2011
Steroids=Excitement
Lots of people claim that steroids are bad for sports, that they ruin the "sanctity" of them and make them a cheap gimmick, but I don't see it that way. I see steroids, or any other performance enhancing drug, as a way to build excitement about a sport, especially boring ones like baseball. If we look back, some of the more exciting players in recent history have been found to use steroids.
My first example of steroids adding entertainment is the home run chase between Mark Mcgwire and Sammy Sosa in 1998. This marked the return of baseball as an exciting sport because you saw two power houses going for the single season home run record and they were going hit for hit until the last game. In the end Sammy Sosa won it and the country was on fire with all the home runs that it seemed hard that anything could make people hate that time. Then it came out that both players had used steroids and now everyone says how horrible that is. It's not horrible, people enjoyed it and had a great time with it, so who cares if they juiced? It's just a game isn't it?
The next example has come a little more recently. Ryan Braun, the 2011 NL MVP, just failed a drug test. Braun played for one of the more exciting teams this year, the Milwaukee Brewers. He was hitting home run after home run and the fans were loving it! People were saying how he is the future of baseball and the best player in the league, until now that everyone knows he took steroids. Now people demand that he forfeit the MVP award and face a possible fifty game suspension.
People should get over steroids in sports because they make things more fun. If Mark and Sammy didn't "roid" it up then no one would watch baseball now and if Ryan didn't then no one would see the awesome moments that made this year so enjoyable. So I say to the people, steroids = excitement.
My first example of steroids adding entertainment is the home run chase between Mark Mcgwire and Sammy Sosa in 1998. This marked the return of baseball as an exciting sport because you saw two power houses going for the single season home run record and they were going hit for hit until the last game. In the end Sammy Sosa won it and the country was on fire with all the home runs that it seemed hard that anything could make people hate that time. Then it came out that both players had used steroids and now everyone says how horrible that is. It's not horrible, people enjoyed it and had a great time with it, so who cares if they juiced? It's just a game isn't it?
The End of an Era
The dismissal of Richard “Rip” Hamilton is more than just an
aging player being let go by his “career” team; it is the end of the Detroit
Pistons glory days. With Richard let go now only two players, Tayshaun Prince
and Ben Wallace, remain from the 2004 NBA Championship team. After seeing what
this team has become, it makes me long for those days of the Wallace duo (not
just because I share the same last name), Mr. Big Shot (Chauncey Billups),
Dangles (Tayshaun Prince), and Rip tearing up the league and showing people
that teamwork wins more than individual ability. So with this reminiscing, I
want to show what the careers of the two most disrespected players from that
starting five, Chauncey and Richard, have been like since they reached the top
of the NBA Mountain.
Chauncey
Billups was the best point guard in the league from a leadership standpoint and
also as a player. He was known to be able to win the game in the clutch, his
professionalism, and for his calm demeanor, no matter what the situation. In 2008
he was traded to his hometown Denver Nuggets and continued with the success
that he had with Detroit, helping them get back to the conference championship
and become contenders. Billups’ time with the Nuggets was cut short however
because of a trade demand by Nugget All-Star Carmelo Anthony, as he and
Chauncey were soon shipped to the New York Knicks in early 2011. While with the
Knicks he assisted into their return to the playoffs, but came down with an
injury late in the first game of the playoff series and would not return. At
the beginning of the 2011-2012 season Billups was again affected by a All-Star
trade demand, this time by point guard Chris Paul, and was offered for a deal
with the Hornets that would send him to New Orleans. This deal fell through
however and has since been waived by the Knicks. He is currently looking for a
new team that will help him return to dominance.
Richard
Hamilton was one of top shooting guards of the 2000’s with the Pistons, able to
come off a screen and hit the jumper, or drive to the basket and finish with
contact. This has been overshadowed in recent years by injuries, trade talks, benchings,
and public feuds with a head coach. His role with the team had been shortened because
of new “better” shooting guards that joined the team, but Rip continued to
outperform them. Finally after years of being under valued Richard has a chance
to join a contender and win his second championship and finish his career on
top.
Even though
they are so great, they are disrespected beyond a shadow of a doubt. I hope
they find a place where they can finally win either separately, or together to
reform the dynamic duo that they were. Right now we have no way of knowing
where they will go, but we will always know how good they were and how they
brought joy back to D Town.
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