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Thursday, August 09, 2007
Rich Galen :: Townhall.com Columnist
Nationals Win!
by Rich Galen
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The Washington Nationals will go down in baseball history as being the team against which Barry Bonds hit his record-breaking 756th major league home run.

As the game was played in San Francisco, it didn't start until 10:15 EDT. That's 10:15 PM. As many of you know, 10:15 PM is, even in the summertime, after dark and therefore after my bedtime.

For those of you who may not be baseball fans, there are a few records which are revered, two of which were held by Babe Ruth: Home Runs in a season - 60; and most home runs over a career - 714. Another is the 56 game hitting streak by Joe DiMaggio and a fourth is most consecutive games played (Cal Ripken, 2,632 breaking Lou Gehrig's 2,130).

It is useful to remember that Ruth started his career with Boston as a pitcher. And he was a pretty fair pitcher. For instance, he still holds the record for the longest complete game in a World Series - 14 innings. In the modern era a pitcher is carried out of the stadium on his teammates' shoulders if he gets through the seventh.

Ruth also held the Major League record for most consecutive scoreless innings by a pitcher in World Series play at 29 2/3 innings in 1916 and 1918; a record which stood until 1961 when the Yankees' Whitey Ford broke it (and, it was feared, his ankle) with 33 1/3 consecutive scoreless innings.

That was the same year that the most famous record in American sports - 60 homers in a season - was broken by Roger Maris of the New York Yankees. Ruth had hit his 60 home runs in 1927 but back in those days the Major League season was 154 games. Maris hit 61 in the modern 162 game schedule and so Commissioner of Baseball Ford Frick (No. Really. That was his name) decided to add an asterisk to Maris' 61 to indicate he had needed eight additional games to break Ruth's mark.

When Henry Aaron broke Ruth's career record, in 1975, it was a different time in America. It was a time when someone's race still mattered to everyone. Ruth, of course, was White as was every Major League baseball player until Jackie Robinson played for the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947 - only 27 years earlier.

Aaron ended his career in 1976 with 755 home runs.

So, it came to Tuesday night and the Washington Nationals were in San Francisco - two teams with no prayer of making the post season, but which were destined to make the history books.

Barry Bonds is not generally known as a pleasant person to be around - if you happen to be another baseball player or a sportswriter.

He is also rumored to have used steroids to enhance his performance and his physical size.

A lot of baseball players have played at the Major League level. A lot of baseball players have used "performance enhancing drugs." Continued...

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About The Author

Rich Galen has been a press secretary to Dan Quayle and Newt Gingrich. Rich Galen currently works as a journalist and writes at Mullings.com

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Bonds and the Homer Record
No one alive can say with a straight face that Barry Bonds and his records are legitimate. Bonds was showing signs of slowing down as early as 1997. His batting average was lower, he had lost speed, and his power numbers seemed to be diminishing, as well. He was publicly quoted as saying he would retire when he hit his 500th mome run and stole his 500th base. he said he didn't care if his team was in the middle of a hot pennant race, he would walk away when he did what he wanted to do! Classic Barry Bonds!

He exhibited jealously over the attention that McGwire and Sosa (Two other steroid shooters) garnered in 1998, he allegedly told Ken Griffey that he was going to begin using THG hormone as quickly as possible and hoped to reinvigorate a magnificent career that the ravages of time were beginning to erode. Three seasons later Bonds, fifty pounds of muscle heavier, hit 73 Home Runs. He had never hit more than 46 in a previous season. The number is suspicious in itself; it becomes incomprhensible when one considers that Barry Bonds turned 38 years old during the 2001 season, an advanced age for a pro athlete. Can we all spell...Phony! I think that sums it up. Let's see if all the writers who refused to vote Mark McGwire into the Hall of Fame this past year stick to their guns when Barry Bonds becomes eligible.

Bonds and his elbow gear
A number of years ago I had the privilege of visiting the Hall of Fame in Cooperstown NY. One of the displays had a rack of baseballs covering the hitting zone for a batter. On each baseball was a percentage. This was what Ted Williams thought he would hit if a pitch landed on the position that the balls represented. I don't remember all the percentages Ted thought he'd achieve, but on the low, outside pitch he had indicated .230. For all balls in that location, Ted figured that his lifetime would be .230 in that region; considerable higher for pitches right down the middle.
Mr. Bonds, prodigeous talent that he is, drives pitches low and outside for great distances and frequencies, thanks to an enhancement not available to the much better hitting Ted Williams. This are, shoulder cuff is not just for protection, but also for driving a low one into the second or third deck in left, left-center field.
Bonds would have been a formidable presence even had he remained at 189 rail-thin pounds, but would also have probably been like Rafael Palmiero at 15-20 taters a year [and we all know what Rafael did after Jose Can-choko joined the Rangers].
The class-act in all this was the noble, self-effacing Henry "the Hammer" Aaron.
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