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A full 11-judge panel of the 9th Circuit threw out the initial appellate decision that favored the government. The full panel heard the case in December and hasn't ruled.
Spring training starts this week, now sure to open under a cloud of suspicion.
Bonds is set for trial March 2, accused of lying to a grand jury when he said he never knowingly took performance-enhancing drugs, and a grand jury is investigating whether Clemens lied when he told a congressional committee under oath last year that he never knowingly used steroids or human growth hormone.
Rodriguez is a three-time AL MVP and the highest-paid player in the majors. With 553 home runs at age 33, the New York third baseman is considered the most likely successor to Bonds' career homer record of 762.
Many in baseball had hoped a "clean" Rodriguez would help push the Steroids Era further into the past by surpassing Bonds. Instead, Rodriguez finds himself swept up in the drug scandal.
Fans were left to wonder: Would the allegations hurt Rodriguez's Hall of Fame chances, the same way they damaged Mark McGwire?
"We can't be shocked by any names, any more," Schilling said in his blog.
[Associated Press;
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