TitusIII
Footballguy
From the Boston Globe:
http://www.boston.com/sports/baseball/arti...ery_many_others
"But most of the talk in New York is about Clemens, who was a stunning name revealed in Mitchell's report. Clemens's lawyer called the allegations "slander," but Mitchell disagreed.
"I offered to meet with [Clemens] to tell him what evidence I had," he said. "If he is denying it, he could have come in and denied it to me."
Mitchell says each player named had chances to defend himself."
Pretty damning, imo...seems like they all know what would happen in a court of law
Also, looks like the player's union is/will be a problem
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/15/sports/b...p;ex=1197954000
The comissioner's office and the player's union secretly agreed to suspend testing in '04 to protect >100 players that had already one positive test, after testifying to Congress on what they were doing about the problem. This last issue will probably be seized upon by some members of Congress to recommend seizing the reigns and taking (actually unprecedented) legislative action themselves, since baseball cannot be trusted. The player's union had tried to get this part of the Mitchell report squashed before it was released for obvious reasons.
http://www.boston.com/sports/baseball/arti...ery_many_others
"But most of the talk in New York is about Clemens, who was a stunning name revealed in Mitchell's report. Clemens's lawyer called the allegations "slander," but Mitchell disagreed.
"I offered to meet with [Clemens] to tell him what evidence I had," he said. "If he is denying it, he could have come in and denied it to me."
Mitchell says each player named had chances to defend himself."
Pretty damning, imo...seems like they all know what would happen in a court of law
Also, looks like the player's union is/will be a problem
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/15/sports/b...p;ex=1197954000
The comissioner's office and the player's union secretly agreed to suspend testing in '04 to protect >100 players that had already one positive test, after testifying to Congress on what they were doing about the problem. This last issue will probably be seized upon by some members of Congress to recommend seizing the reigns and taking (actually unprecedented) legislative action themselves, since baseball cannot be trusted. The player's union had tried to get this part of the Mitchell report squashed before it was released for obvious reasons.