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Thread: The Barry Watch

  1. #1
    Thread Killah/Angels Mod riverdunesrat's Avatar
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    Giants The Barry Watch

    Posted on Sat, Aug. 27, 2005

    The Barry watch
    EVEN MTV.COM GETS IN THE ACT
    By John Ryan
    Mercury News

    Normally we're happy taking the Giants' updates on Barry Bonds' recovery, since of course they're totally on top of his condition and totally aren't clueless about whether he's even in the country. And there's always his Web site to offer hope and hey looky here we take all major credit cards!

    But in this strangest of seasons, we find ourselves at an odd place seeking news: MTV.com, which caught a glimpse of Bonds at a movie premiere Tuesday night.

    The Web site had a reporter on hand in Hollywood for ``Dirty Deeds,'' featuring former major leaguer Todd Zeile in his acting debut and as the executive producer. The report noted Bonds ``was clad in a black T-shirt and jeans and was smiling brightly while he walked without any discernible limp.''

    Woohoo! Proof that he isn't on round-the-clock antibiotics!

    Bonds answered one question. The $22 million man was asked about his interest in producing a movie.

    ``Me?'' he laughed. ``No, I'm broke.''






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  2. #2
    Thread Killah/Angels Mod riverdunesrat's Avatar
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    Giants

    Posted on Wed, Sep. 07, 2005

    Bonds vs. the world
    OPPONENT LIST KEEPS GROWING
    By John Ryan
    Mercury News

    Jason Christiansen didn't say yes. He didn't say no. Did he have to say anything?

    This is what Jeff Kent meant when he revealed in 2002, after the one flare-up the world did see, ``Just add that to the half a dozen times we've done it before. It's no big deal.''

    To be honest, Buzz is a little disappointed. In the morning we thought we'd be able to handicap the roster: Who was it who brawled with Bonds? Sure, Christiansen was the favorite, for his 6-5, 230 frame and for his statements on the way out of town. But we were going to have some fun. ``It's like Agatha Christie,'' a co-worker noted. ``There's like 10 suspects and they all have motive and opportunity.''

    So we're deflated, and left with only this thought: When Christiansen complained about arm strain, maybe it was just from trying to wrap it around Bonds' allegedly enlarged head.

    Fight inventory

    Into Bonds lore, then, goes an otherwise forgettable Giants left-hander. But with whom? These clubhouse fights don't always make it into the papers, so it's hard to put together a scorecard. We can give Bonds only one decisive victory: a one-punch knockdown of San Diego's Phil Plantier in a spring batting-cage dispute.

    But it's a darn impressive list of opponents. No asterisks means only words were exchanged, that we know of. *: a teammate, not an opponent. **: Physical contact alleged or confirmed. ***: contact with a teammate.

    In no particular order:

    *Jim Leyland (mgr.)

    *Andy Van Slyke

    ***Jeff Kent

    Ron Kittle

    Tony La Russa

    Gary Sheffield

    Matt Williams

    ***Danny Darwin

    **Phil Plantier

    Turk Wendell

    Mark Carreon

    Jay Bell

    Sammy Sosa

    Roger Clemens

    Babe Ruth (posthumous)

    ***Jason Christiansen

    That's all we came up with. But it didn't take us very long.

    Bonding by fighting

    If those clubhouse walls, or Dusty Baker, could talk. After the Kent-Bonds showdown, Baker saw the positive: ``It usually happens on good teams. It doesn't happen on bad teams.''

    Oh, yes it does.

    Fantasy baseball

    Meanwhile in Neverland . . .

    The Giants will start selling playoff tickets today at www.sfgiants.com.

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  3. #3
    Thread Killah/Angels Mod riverdunesrat's Avatar
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    Giants

    Barry sez....

    Didn't see where anyone posted this story here......

    ESPN.com: Baseball

    Tuesday, September 20, 2005
    Bonds: Congress wasting its time with steroid inquiry

    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Associated Press

    WASHINGTON -- In the nation's capital on his first road trip of 2005, Barry Bonds questioned why Congress, the media and fans continue to talk about steroids.


    Bonds would like everyone to be quiet about steroids -- just like he told people to shush after home run No. 706.

    "I think we have other issues in this country to worry about that are a lot more serious. I think you guys should direct your efforts into taking care of that," the San Francisco Giants slugger said Tuesday before facing the Washington Nationals. "Talk about the athletes that are helping Katrina. Ask yourselves how much money y'all personally donated and have helped."

    Asked whether Congress was wasting time by looking into steroid use in sports, Bonds responded: "Pretty much, I think so. Yeah."


    Several congressional committees have held hearings on drug testing in pro sports, and legislation has been proposed to standardize leagues' drug policies.


    "You know what? There are still other issues that are more important," Bonds said. "Right now, people are losing lives, don't have homes, I think that's a little more serious. A lot more serious."


    Told of Bonds' comments, Dave Marin, a spokesman for House Government Reform Committee chairman Tom Davis, R-Va., said: "Members of Congress, particularly Tom Davis, can walk and chew gum at the same time."

    Congressional investigators from that committee are looking into whether Baltimore Orioles slugger Rafael Palmeiro lied under oath about steroid use and are interviewing other players who know Palmeiro.


    Bonds has not been contacted.

    "Raffy Palmeiro and I are good friends and we will stay continually good friends. Period. And I will always have respect for him as a person and a player, regardless," Bonds said.


    Bonds, booed throughout Tuesday's game, hit his 706th homer in the fourth inning.

    As the ball arched toward the stands, fans who moments earlier were booing rose to cheer. Bonds was booed when his name was announced during pregame introductions, booed when he stepped into the on-deck circle, and booed when he went out to play left field.


    "I've been tarnished for being in baseball for years and years. There's nothing you guys can write or people can say that's going to fix that. It doesn't matter any more. I go out there and enjoy the game," he said.


    It was Bonds' third homer of 2005, and it came in his 18th at-bat. Out all season after three knee operations, he returned to the Giants on Sept. 12.
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  4. #4
    Thread Killah/Angels Mod riverdunesrat's Avatar
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    Giants

    Junk Bonds

    ESPN.com: Page 2

    Thursday, September 22, 2005
    Everyone should junk Bonds

    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    By Skip Bayless
    Page 2

    If possible, he's even better and worse than ever. He continues to astonish, with his bat and his mouth. At 41, Barry Bonds is again proving to be the greatest hitter and biggest jerk in baseball history.


    Feel free to substitute less printable terms for jerk.


    No athlete I've been around has mixed my emotions the way this guy has. Mixed 'em like a Molotov cocktail.


    BONDS IN MOTION
    Bonds Argues There are More Serious Issues then Steroids Right Now


    More than ever, I'd rather watch a Bonds at-bat than any other moment in sports. Yet his recent words and deeds have finally made it impossible for even me -- a Barry fan -- to separate the hitter from the jerk.


    I used to be able to forget all the bad stuff when Bonds anchored his left leg in the batter's box. I used to rationalize that he was a much better teammate than most fans thought -- Jeff Kent was just jealous -- and that Bonds was THE reason the Giants were always in contention.


    But now that he has let down his team and let down parents everywhere, I finally find myself rooting against this big, uh, jerk.


    I'm not sure which offends me more: that Bonds damaged (if not wrecked) his team's chance to win the mild, mild West by delaying his return, or that, upon his first visit to Washington to play the Nationals, he scoffed that Congress has been wasting its time with the steroids issue.


    As a sign at RFK Stadium on Tuesday night said: "Junk Bonds."


    But yes, his comeback has been even better than James Bond in "You Only Live Twice." After missing the first 143 games with what he said was a bad knee, Bonds waltzed back into the lineup on Sept. 13, and in his first at-bat, battled San Diego's Adam Eaton for 11 pitches before hitting a tailing laser to left center that came within a foot of leaving SBC Park.


    Superhuman.


    At 41, the man didn't even need a minor-league rehab stint. He launched No. 707 on Wednesday night -- just seven short of Babe Ruth  and that's four home runs in four games. That's even beyond Bonds.


    And that's what makes me -- and others inside the organization and close to the Giants -- suspicious.


    You assume Bonds had off-season arthroscopic surgery on his knee ... but with this guy, you never know. In the past, he told reporters with a chuckle that he sometimes misleads them just to get even for all the "negative stuff" they write about him.


    You assume he hurt the knee again and had a second surgery ... but Giants insiders say the story the media was given was bogus. They say Bonds and his handlers wanted the team to announce he reinjured the knee when he banged it against a clubhouse table, when in fact that isn't how it occurred. So who knows what really happened, if anything?


    You assume the knee got infected, as Bonds said it did. But who knows?


    Remember the kill-the-messenger soliloquy he delivered to the media in spring training? The one in which he used his crutches and his son as sympathy-seeking props and blamed the media for reporting his leaked BALCO grand jury testimony and the claims of his former mistress, who also testified to the grand jury?


    Bonds reportedly told the grand jury that he used a substance that prosecutors believe was steroids.


    So, by all means, it was the media's fault that Bonds chose a personal trainer who eventually would plead guilty to conspiring to distribute steroids. And yes, Barry, it was our fault that you dumped your longtime mistress after moving her to Phoenix and that she hit the talk-show circuit to say you often talked to her about your steroid use.


    Bonds leaned on his crutch at spring training and said: "You wanted me to jump off a bridge, I finally did. You finally brought me and my family down ... So now go pick on a different person."


    It's possible that Bonds' knee had very little to do with his absence for most of the season. It's quite possible he simply decided to take his home-run balls and go home.


    It's also possible he wanted to lay low while the BALCO investigation ran its course.


    And yes, it's also possible that a relatively minor cartilage cleanup procedure -- usually a month-long recovery, at most -- turned into a six-month rehab.


    But people around the Giants wonder.


    If Bonds could immediately turn back into Bonds on Sept. 13, why couldn't he have returned a week or two earlier? Was that too much to ask of a guy who's making $22 million this season, a guy who was allowed to spend most of the summer at his home in Beverly Hills, Calif.?


    Yes, the Giants had won eight of nine before he rejoined them in Los Angeles. But in the seven games he was with the team before he actually played, San Francisco went 2-5. Those losses could loom larger if Barry's team falls a game or two short of the begging-to-be-caught Padres.


    The Giants trail San Diego by five games, but have three left with the Padres.


    Bonds' mere presence in the lineup is so menacing for division rivals -- especially the Padres -- that you have to wonder what took him so long to return. The answer you hear from people who know Bonds is: He just wanted to remind everyone that he's Barry Bonds and that he does everything on his own time and terms.


    Way to help your team, Barry.


    And you're still sitting out day games after night games when you're only in uniform for the final two and a half weeks of the season?


    Way to earn that salary, big guy.


    Then again, was it a coincidence that Bonds returned a couple of days after Giants owner Peter Magowan said publicly -- and shockingly -- that for the first time, the Giants would entertain trade offers for Bonds?


    Probably not.


    Magowan had had enough of his $22 Million Disappearing Man.


    It also was no coincidence that Bonds waited to make his mind-blowing remarks about the steroid issue until his first visit to Washington. He wanted to rub Congress' nose in it right under Congress' nose.


    Remember, the biggest reason Bonds avoided having to testify before the congressional steroid hearings in March was that he was still involved in the ongoing BALCO investigation.


    And remember: For the past three or so years, FBI sources in the Bay Area have indicated that Bonds was the primary target of that investigation. Either Bonds has been very lucky or very clean, or he has hired very good lawyers.


    Tuesday at RFK, Bonds set another major-league record for audacity.


    Asked whether Congress has wasted its time trying to clean up the steroid problem in sports, Bonds said: "Pretty much, I think so. Yeah."


    Though he acknowledged the problem, Bonds said: "There are still other issues that are more important. Right now, people are losing lives and don't have homes. I think that's a little more serious. A lot more serious ...


    "We're the United States. We have a crisis here that everybody needs to start contributing to. Not pointing fingers. Contributing to."


    The nerve of this guy using the Gulf Coast disaster to trivialize the seriousness of the steroid epidemic facing this country. Obviously, the Katrina tragedy is far more pressing, but does that mean we should forget about all the teenagers abusing steroids?


    That was the main goal of the hearing. Members of Congress wanted sluggers to tell kids about the potential dangers of steroid overdosing. Mark McGwire and (after the fact) Rafael Palmeiro wound up incriminating themselves.


    But has Barry Bonds ever mounted his soapbox to preach to kids about the evils of steroids? Not once. His basic message is always: We're entertainers. You media people should just leave us alone and let us do what we need to do to entertain people."


    Unfortunately, too many fans agree with Bonds.


    My stance has always been to either make performance-enhancing drugs legal, or make the testing and penalties so severe that the cheaters can no longer cheat.


    But kids' emulating their heroes and using unsupervised mega-doses of black-market steroids is an entirely different issue. Apparently, Bonds didn't watch the March testimony of the parents who lost children because of steroid abuse.


    No real tragedy there. Right, Barry?


    Now you wonder how many members of Congress -- who continue to investigate Palmeiro for perjury -- would like to waste a little more time investigating Bonds.


    He's all but daring them to.


    He's Barry Bonds and they're not.


    And even I can no longer root for him.


    Skip Bayless can be seen Monday through Friday on "Cold Pizza," ESPN2's morning show, and at 4 p.m. ET on ESPN's "1st & 10." His column appears twice a week on Page 2. You can e-mail Skip here.
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  5. #5
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    I have already emailed Skip on his bullshit

  6. #6
    Thread Killah/Angels Mod riverdunesrat's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by love_that_reefer
    I have already emailed Skip on his bullshit
    What did he say, did he answer back?
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  7. #7
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    Of course not, this is Skip Bayless who can dish it out but can't take it.

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