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And you probably remember how that went. One year, he scolded reporters for scaring his kids; another year he dismissed all the investigators from MLB looking into steroid use as Keystone cops.
"Let them investigate. Let them, they've been doing it this long," Bonds said." It doesn't weigh on me at all -- at all. It's just you guys talking."
Braun is a different guy altogether. He says he's avoided giving his side of the story for fear of being a distraction, and his supporters hint that when the case becomes public, it will be different in both fact and substance than any one that's gone before it. Until then, they're asking everybody to withhold judgment.
In the meantime, it's left the field wide open to speculation. He's promised to address the matter thoroughly once the decision by baseball arbitrator Shyam Das is issued and then plans to be done with it.
Yet even if Braun is suspended, he can still train with the Brewers and play in Cactus League games, which opens him up to questions from fans who can be less deferential and a whole lot more insulting. Either way, it's likely to make for an interesting few weeks.
MLB likes to say the steroid era is effectively over because of its tightened-up drug testing program, but that's probably far from true, given the range of new drugs and masking substances that are constantly being developed to replace the old performance enhancers.
But the reaction to Braun, who came off as one of the good guys in baseball before the positive test, will tell us a lot about whether fans think the era is over, too. It means there's one less guy left to bust that would make most fans give a damn.
[Associated Press;
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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