Quantcast The Torch Online
College Media Network

Torch

The Award-Winning Student Newspaper of St. John's University

Odds Without Ends

Major league blunder

Gregory Leporati, Editor-in-Chief

Issue date: 2/20/08Section: Editor Columns
  • Print
  • Email

"Baseball? Doesn't the government have anything better to do than focus on Baseball?"

This was one of the many questions I asked myself on Dec. 13, a day that I remember as being more than eventful for the Torch.
First, the government officially released the Mitchell Report, a 400-page document that accused various MLB players, such as Roger Clemens, of having taken steroids. Key evidence in the report came from Brian McNamee, a former trainer of Clemens and also a former St. John's student and professor.

Second, I received an e-mail from Journalism chair Dr. Roger V. Wetherington, informing me that the steroid allegations, and McNamee's involvement, was a "wonderful scoop" and a story that must be put "on the Web site as soon as possible."

I chose not to run an article on the Mitchell Report back in December, since we were unable to obtain any original information on the story.

However, Dr. Wetherington was certainly right - the whole Clemens ordeal is an especially noteworthy story. But why?
As far as I'm concerned, its notoriety has nothing to do with Roger Clemens, Andy Pettitte, Bud Selig, or even St. John's own Brian McNamee. Rather, if anything, the entire fiasco simply serves as a clear-cut example of how ineffective government agencies have become as of late.

The one in question this time is the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, which has existed in varying forms since 1816. The committee, comprised of various congressmen, have dealt with fairly meaningful issues in the recent past, such as September 11, Hurricane Katrina, the validity of information that led to the war in Iraq, and even the Clinton/Lewinsky scandal.

So, after having investigated some fairly important issues in the last 15 years or so, what leads the committee to Roger Clemens?

In essence, the committee is trying to make an example of Clemens and the rest of the MLB players accused in the Mitchell Report. But in practice, the hearing is nothing more than a circus.

First, and most notably, the Mitchell Report itself is simply a collection of baseless accusations, indicating that Clemens may have taken HGH (human growth hormone) at some point between 1999 and 2007. It also accuses Clemens's wife of having received an injection prior to a Sports Illustrated: Swimsuit Edition photo shoot.

There is no hard evidence to prove any of these accusations; instead, the entire hearing is simply a "he said, she said" case, nearly impossible to resolve. Sure, it seems that Roger Clemens probably took steroids, but how can McNamee, who has lied about steroid injections in the past, necessarily be trusted?
Page 1 of 2 next >

Article Tools

Be the first to comment on this story

  • NOTE: Email address will not be published

Type your comment below (html not allowed)

  I understand posting spam or other comments that are unrelated to this article will cause my comment to be flagged for deletion and possibly cause my IP address to be permanently banned from this server.

Advertisement

Poll

Do you use Ratemyprofessor.com?
Submit Vote

View Results

Advertisement