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| Yes | 63% | 158 votes | Total: 251 votes | |
| No | 37% | 93 votes |
Created on: February 24, 2009
The "asterisk" that has been referred to in Major League Baseball has to do with players that hold records but have used performance enhancement substances at some point in their careers. The theory behind this is that you can't just exclude someone from the record books because they were on steroids, but at the same time they had an unfair advantage and this "asterisk" would appear next to their names in the history books to let people know that they achieved this remarkable feet by unfair means. This would allow the public to decide how to perceive these athletes on a case by case basis.
In the last few years many professional baseball players have been accused, or have come forward and admitted to using performance enhancing substances at some point in their careers. Some of these players were Barry Bonds (accused), Roger Clemens (accused), Andy Pettitte (admitted), Jose Canseco (admitted to using himself, and accused or incriminated many others, in his book, Juiced: Wild Times, Rampant 'Roids, Smash Hits & How Baseball Got Big), just to name a few players. A pattern started to form; those who admitted their usage were quickly forgiven and got back to work, those who did not ended up in front of government inquiries and soon charged with perjury.
In light of this, when Alex Rodriguez was accused of using performance enhancing substances by a reporter he willingly set up an interview with a very respected baseball journalist (Peter Gammons of ESPN) to confess to the public that he had, in fact, used these substances early in his career. This seems like the best course of action. Alex Rodriguez (A-Rod) is still young in his baseball career. He is on track to break the all time home run record barring a major injury later in his career. He understood that a criminal investigation was not something that would be good for him personally, or for his career. He also had several teammates to learn from. Roger Clemens denied these accusations until he was blue in the face and is still stuck in a legal struggle against the charge of perjury, and it looks like his career is over. Andy Pettitte and Jason Giambi admitted their usage and will both play with this season without the distraction of legal proceedings.
This leaves only one question. Will the name "Alex Rodriguez" appear in the record books with an asterisk? It is important to note that Major League Baseball has not yet made a decision about using the asterisk in situations where steroids were used, but it
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