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It also left players and managers with mixed emotions: baffled that Ramirez would get caught again, angry that baseball is still dealing with the specter of steroid use, and disappointed that another of the game's great players has walked away.
"Once you get caught once, I mean, you're already banged 50 games, why try again?" said Red Sox pitcher Bobby Jenks, a teammate of Ramirez for a short time last season in Chicago. "I mean, it's a little stupid, but I guess he made his own choices. Now he's got to live with them."
"Might have been running out of bullets," added Phillies manger Charlie Manuel, who worked with Ramirez in Cleveland. "Father Time was catching up to him."
The Rays had hoped that Ramirez could add some pop to a lineup that lost several key pieces off last year's AL East champions. After all, he'll finish as a .312 hitter with 13 seasons of 100-plus RBIs and 555 home runs, 14th on the all-time list.
And quite possibly an asterisk next to all those numbers.
"Major League Baseball, they're all after those people," White Sox manager Ozzie Guillen said. "They don't play around. They let the players know how tough they're going to be.
"People think Major League Baseball plays around because they have a past," Guillen said. "If you get caught, you should be punished, because now we know for the last five or six years they're after this. Any players who do that are taking a risk, a big one, because they even check me. I'm not even playing. I'm glad they're after this."
Still, Guillen acknowledged that Ramirez was one of the game's great hitters.
He led the American League with a .349 average in 2002, finished second the next year, and had an AL-best 43 home runs in 2004. He made more than $200 million in contracts, a testament both to his hitting prowess and his ability to draw fans to the ballpark.
But there was another side of Manny -- his lackadaisical nature, particularly on defense and the basepaths, that rubbed some managers and teammates the wrong way.
Ramirez flied out four times in his big league debut in 1993. In his next game, he hit two homers and nearly a third -- a long drive at Yankee Stadium bounced over the left-field fence for a double. Trouble was, Ramirez had his head down and assumed it was a home run, so he trotted past second base and was nearing third when his cackling teammates finally stopped him.
It was simply Manny being Manny.
"He didn't take life too seriously," said Yankees catcher Russell Martin, who was with Ramirez on the Dodgers in 2009 and '10. "I feel like some fans live and die with the game. He just didn't take it to that level."
The question now is whether his drug use will forever shame him.
"It's hard not to wonder what's what," Dodgers manager Don Mattingly said. "You just don't know. And that's the hardest part."
Damon refused to discuss whether Ramirez's reputation has been tainted.
"It's unfortunate," Damon said. "I don't know everything that's been brought up. All I know is he's a great teammate and a great player."
Texas manager Ron Washington offered a more somber assessment of Ramirez's career.
"Until the past couple of years, I thought he was on his way to the Hall of Fame," Washington said. "I don't think many guys got as many big hits in their careers as he has. There weren't many guys who had as big an effect on a game as he had.
"You hate to see greatness all of a sudden just fade."
[Associated Press;
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