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And he probably will. In the next few weeks he could catch Ken Griffey Jr. at 630 home runs, putting him among the top five home run hitters. From there, it's 30 home runs to Mays, and then the chase is really on.
That it's a fraudulent chase may not matter in New York. It certainly won't matter to the Yankees, who will surely use it to peddle those expensive seats behind home plate they can never seem to sell.
For those who care about the game, though, it will be distasteful. Baseball already has one steroid user atop the home run totals, and it hardly needs another. And A-Rod as the focal point of the home run chase during the next few years will be a daily reminder of all that went wrong with the sport and the people who stood by and allowed it to happen.
All the more reason to celebrate Jeter as he goes after the last few hits he needs for entrance in a club that includes only 27 other major leaguers. Unlike the guy playing next to him, there's never been a whiff of scandal around Jeter, never a question that he might have done something illegal or unethical to get an edge.
Jeter heads home Thursday for a four-game series against Tampa Bay at Yankee Stadium, where he and Yankee fans everywhere hope he gets the final three hits of needs for No. 3,000. Unlike Three Rivers Stadium in Pittsburgh 39 years ago, the stadium figures to be packed.
That it comes just before the All-Star break makes it even more delicious. Jeter can be feted over the weekend, and again in Arizona when he starts at shortstop for the American League.
He'll get the kind of celebration Clemente never got.
The kind of celebration A-Rod should never get.
[Associated Press;
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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