If you ask an English professor at any university they will tell you the classic definition of tragedy is when a character is doing something that is correct or dearly loved, and it becomes the undoing of them or the thing they love the most. Nowhere is this tragedy being played out more dramatically or obviously than the story of Barry Bonds and the chaos he brings to Major League Baseball. No one has ever questioned Bond's affinity or passion for the sport. However, his behavior both on and off the field has led many to believe the while he strives to break the greatest record in baseball history he is becoming the sports greatest villain.
The scandal
There was a time when watching Barry Bonds beat Babe Ruth's homerun record and begin to chase the famous 755 homers by Hank Aaron was a delightful and exhilarating past time. However in the light of allegations of the use of performance-enhancing drugs and various anecdotal evidence thereof, watching him tackle the record has become a painful and angering process. What does it matter how many home runs you hit if you have to have drugs in your system to make you more able to do it? Barry Bonds has categorically denied that he is ever used performance-enhancing drugs although many in baseball who have confessed to doing so had named him as a co-conspirator. Still he maintains that there is no proof and until there is, he is innocent. Unfortunately, while proof is the foundation of the justice system, common sense goes a long way. Barry Bond's continuing appearance in the scandal shows him to be a tragic figure, doing what he should not be able to do in a way he should not be doing it.
The attitude
Barry Bonds is closing in on Hank Aaron's record and the resulting scandal of possible performance-enhancing drug use have brought him some attention that he didn't want. Frequently whenever he takes the field, he is booed, heckled and hissed. Some people boo because they feel he did cheat in pursuing this homerun record. Others, however, claim they boo because he is generally an unpleasant person. Baseball is and will always be about relationships with fans. Whether you like it or not, when you're being paid $2.5 million a year they expect to be willing to shake their hand, to smile, and to treat them with general warmth and affection. Most baseball players manage to find a wonderful balance of creating a fan base built on genuine love for the game and finding private time where they can experience their full range of emotions. Bonds has no such desire or balance. His attitude towards fans is often described as hostile, mad or snarling. Even when he smiling for cameras there is a general fakeness to his pose that makes people believe he is not happy to be around anyone. Nobody questions Barry Bonds is a great baseball player. They do question if he is a good person.
The theft
The issue of taking Hank Aaron's homerun crown creates ire in many fans in part because it is such a special memory. Anyone who was alive then and remembers the grainy images on television of number 755 coasting over the fence will tell you it is a treasured part of their recollection. For anyone to come near that number, and potentially eclipse it creates a certain amount of loss and grief in fans. Add to that the possibility of performance-enhancing drugs or steroid use, and the attitude of someone who seems less like a hometown hero and more like a big bully with a bat, and you see why they consider Aaron's crown to be stolen from his head, rather than rightfully earned. This more than anything else, is what is created concern about Barry Bonds eventually taking over the record.
Historically, Barry Bonds will go down in baseball history as a tragic talent. His inability to overcome his self and his sins will forever tarnish his achievements and his hopes.
Barry Bonds All Star
Take yourself back to April 1974, 10 years after the passage of the Civil Rights Act and exactly six years after the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. African Americans were beginning to make gains in all avenues of life, and Hank Aaron was on the verge of becoming the all-time homerun king in a league that excluded Blacks until 1947.
Prior to Aaron's assault on sports? most sacred record, many still believed Blacks to be less than their White counterparts and were not ready for an African American to bump the beloved Babe Ruth into second place on the homerun list.
Hate mail began pouring in after the 1973 season. One read:
?Dear Nigger Henry,
You are (not) going to break this record established by the great Babe Ruth if I can help it?Whites are far more superior than jungle bunnies'My gun is watching your every black move.?
However, in April 1974 Aaron blasted a homerun off Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Al Downing and cemented himself as one of the all-time greats of the game.
During the 2007 baseball season, San Francisco Giants slugger Barry Bonds found himself in the middle of similar controversy, receiving hate mail and verbal threats as he neared Aaron's all-time record. However, Bonds received hate mail because of the color skin and for allegedly of using performance-enhancing drugs.
Like former Major League Baseball commissioner Bowie Kuhn, current commissioner Bud Selig was absent on August 7, 2007 when Bonds surpassed Aaron with 756 career homeruns.
Aaron who was also absent for the historic event released a taped statement.
?I would like to offer my congratulations to Barry Bonds on becoming baseball's career homerun leader. It is a great accomplishment, which requires skill, longevity and determination. Throughout the past century, the homerun has held a special place in baseball, and I have been privileged to hold this record for 33 of those years. I move over now and offer my best wishes to Barry and his family on this historical achievement. My hope today, as it was on that April evening in 1974, is that the achievement of this record will inspire others to chase their own dreams.?
Rumors circulated that Aaron would not attend any of Bonds? games because of the allegations surrounding the new record. Many in the baseball community have also questioned the legitimacy of the new record.
?I don't think it's going to diminish what Hank Aaron accomplished. I think he'll always be known as the guy, because of the allegations and stuff. I think people will always consider him the legitimate homerun king,? said the legendary Ozzie Smith.
Despite the controversy, and his lack of popularity amongst fans outside of the Bay Area, Bonds maintains he never knowingly took steroids and that the new record is completely legitimate.
?This record is not tainted. At all. At all. Period. You guys can say whatever you want,? Bonds said.
According to writer Ken Davidoff, all records are a product of their time. For instance, Babe Ruth only played against White competition. Hank Aaron played nine seasons in hitter-friendly Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium while Willie Mays spent 12 seasons hitting into the mighty winds of Candlestick Park. Moreover, Bonds played in an era when many were abusing performance-enhancing drugs.
Furthermore, how should historians view Barry Bonds and the new homerun record? Is the record tainted because of the steroid allegations? How much has race played a factor in the way the media and fans treat Bonds? Will baseball fans ever adore him the same way they adore Ruth, Mickey Mantle or Mays?
Unfortunately, for Aaron, it took 33 years to get the admiration he deserves from baseball fans. Will it take as long for Barry Bonds to receive that same admiration from the fans?
Todd A. Smith has sinced written about articles on various topics from Education, Entertainment Guide and Facts about Barack Obama. Todd Smith is the web master for The preeminent Online Magazine for African American Men. Todd A. Smith's top article generates over 1220000 views. to your Favourites.
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