DISCUSS: Who Is the Rightful Home Run Champ?

DISCUSS: Who Is the Rightful Home Run Champ?

This weekend’s discussion topic is about baseball, but more than baseball, so even non-fans are invited to weigh in.

The Yankee’s Aaron Judge hit his 62nd home run, breaking the American League record held by Roger Maris.  (By now, he might have hit more, since I’m writing this post on Tuesday when he set the record.)

But that is not the major league record.  In the National League, Mark McGwire, Sammy Sosa, and Barry Bonds all passed Maris, with Bonds in 2001 setting the all time mark at 73.

Except that was in the era when many ballplayers were taking Performance Enhancing Drugs, jacking up their strength with steroids and growth hormones.  McGwire later admitted to doing it.  Sosa was suspected of using.  So was Bonds, though he denied it and never tested positive.  Because of their suspected drug use, none of these players, despite their prodigious achievements, have been elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame.

Maris’s son, Roger Maris, Jr., is saying that Major League Baseball should expunge Bonds’ 73 homers from the record books because he cheated to get them.  He insists that Aaron Judge should be recognized as hitting the most home runs.  Alternatively, he is now suggesting that baseball have two records, one for home runs and the other for PED [performance enhancing drugs] home runs.  (This recalls the fabled asterisk that was put on his father’s record, since his feat was accomplished in a season of 162 games, whereas Babe Ruth, whom he surpassed, hit his 60 in 154 games.)

What do you think?  Who is the rightful home run champ?  Judge or Bonds?

 

 

"They are there. And they have strong arguments."

Tariffs and the Labor Problem
"It's a big tent, I guess. But I went to Catholic schools for twelve years ..."

DISCUSS: Make America Religious Again
"I can’t discuss this with you if you can’t tell what mathematical realities apply and ..."

Tariffs and the Labor Problem
"This isn't a young people phenomenon. It’s been ongoing for some time. And I don’t ..."

Tariffs and the Labor Problem

Browse Our Archives