The truth of the matter is that it is time for all of Clemens' detractors to shut up.
What has become apparent in the last few weeks is that there is some wacky double-standard held for Yankees players verses the rest of the league. Clemens had the same clause in his contract with the Astros for the past three seasons. Many of the same baseball commentators and fans were then saying how terrific it was that he found a situation where he could continue pitching and spend time with his family.
Now he has the same deal in pinstripes and it's a problem? C'mon.
It seems like every single Sportscenter that airs features a new player calling out Clemens for his selfishness. Where were these complaints a year ago when he did the exact same thing to Houston? Back then the media toted the situation off as giving the public a chance to watch a legend in the making. Almost every Roger Clemens start was covered extensively on baseball programs and the watching nation "oohed" and "aahed" at his every twitch.
But this season there are countless baseball and sports experts bashing the same player who brought them pitching gems to talk about in Houston.
The main complaint seems to be a delusion that Clemens somehow considers himself bigger than the game. If that's the case, he has been bigger than the game for three seasons now; working on four. Sports writers do not get to decide whether or not a player is, can, or will be bigger than the game.
The fact of the matter is that three teams were willing to meet with Clemens and listen to his demands. Three teams understood that they could refuse to meet such unprecedented requests and simply watch Roger retire. And three teams decided to make pitches to the seven-time Cy Young winner anyways.
How exactly is it the pitchers' fault when multiple team owners are willing to meet his demands as he dives into his mid-forties?
And I wonder about all these people calling out the Rocket. Would they refuse an offer to work only half the year for a high amount of income? Would they deny the chance to spend more time with their own families if given the opportunity? It's easy to say "no" when the choice is not available to you.
So stop bashing Clemens and making a big deal about nothing. Stop criticizing him without a valid reason. And stop wasting my time with useless garbage about how Clemens is bad for the game. Enough is enough.
Published by Ankur Amin
I am a college student who loves to watch, talk and write about sports. My favorite teams are based in Detroit, but I try my best to say unbiased. View profile
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4 Comments
Post a CommentIf last weekend's game is a testament to how well he's going to do for the rest of the season, he can have any contract stipulations he wants as far as I'm concerned!
He's the best pitcher ever - period. It's fine to hate the Yankees, but don't be stupid about Clemens. We are fortunate to see a player that future generations will use as the definitive measurement stick for the greatness of all starting pitchers.
No no no, he's great for the game. Anyone who can eat up Yankee cash and won't really contribute that much...that's good. The Yankees and their actions are bad for the game, not Clemens. Not traveling with the team...that is selfish. But that's the kind of team chemistry that we expect to see in New York.
He's a jerk and uses steroids.