In the last few days since the Mitchell Report came out, we have been treated to three articles by ESPN’s Jayson Stark; three articles that stretch the boundaries of human logic; three articles that are the very definition of the word “denial”; and three articles that begin an introductory psychology course called "cognitive dissonance theory". It should be noted that Stark is NOT a past Bonds-basher; is not someone with a personal axe to grind; and is generally not considered a “hack” or a “Cosellout”. For the most part he is supposed to be one of the "good journalists". And for those very reasons, the articles are even more distressing.


1) Jayson Stark on Thursday
: Many Legacies Will Be Tarnished Forever (Foul Ball: Strike 1)
Stark asks: C’mon. Was it really worth all that money, all that time, all that trouble? Was it really worth it to relive all those years of ugliness, shred all those reputations, embarrass the sport of baseball all over again?”
Stark, who opposed the investigation from the beginning, is “convinced more than ever” that the answer is an emphatic “no”. While I would have wholeheartedly agreed with him 20 months ago, my position has been completely reversed. The report’s deliverance of the Clemens allegations and 85 other players’ names wasn’t just “a call to action” to baseball, but was one to our sports media. And that call to action is this: there will be ONE standard across the board for judging steroids allegations against MLB players. Period.
Stark writes: “But if there’s anyone out there who still believes in that old-fashioned innocent-until-proven-guilty stuff, you might want to read that Clemens section over one more time.” 
Too Late: The legal standard of “innocent-until-proven-guilty” in sports media has been completely obliterated with the past 4 years of Barry Bonds coverage. Either it is a legal standard for EVERYBODY or it is not. If “common sense” or “court of public opinion” is good enough for Barry Bonds, then it is good enough for Roger Clemens.
 
2) Jayson Stark On Saturday: Stories of Clemens, Bonds, Similar, Yet Very Different (Strike 2 – Looking)
In this article, Jayson Stark offers a legal analysis of the evidence against Roger Clemens in a level of detail never seen before in the 2,398,653 articles ever written by a mainstream sportswriter on Barry Bonds (not named Roger Cossack). However, D.K. Wilson from Sports On My Mind, HAS successfully defended the Bonds steroids case on legal grounds on many occasions. In that sense, he is also the perfect person to address the seriously-flawed offering of Stark where he questions the source “corroboration” surrounding Clemens.  Although Stark even cites Andy Pettitte’s confession (which supports  McNamee’s credibility)  and “a mountain of circumstantial evidence”  (Jason Grimsley? late-career surge? weight gain?) he is still left with “more questions than answers”. In Wilson’s detailed response to Stark, we are reminded that:
– the Clemens allegations are stronger than the Bonds allegations
– former trainer Brian McNamee is a former undercover policeman, and not some shadowy figure
– the “motivational” narrative for The Game of Shadows was provided by Kimberly Bell — Bonds’ jilted lover who recently sold her story and naked pictures to Playboy.
– This point about Kimberly Bell carries extra weight when considering that an unconvinced Stark needs more information around Clemens’ “motivation” to use steroids. Forget just being a competitive athlete at the highest level, Stark seems unfulfilled without a  “he was jealous of Randy Johnson” storyline. Wilson responds:
“Perhaps this is Stark’s way of saying he doesn’t want to believe that Clemens used PEDs, because, relative to his prior treatment of Barry Bonds and how he was so willing to quickly “give him the business,” it sure sounds like it. If he doesn’t want to believe in the “Rocket’s” guilt, he could have just come out and said it.”
Okay, I”LL say it. Starks doesn’t want to believe that “the Rocket” is guilty! And he will become Johnnie Cochran before having his dream shattered. Here, take a look. Stark writes:
“But is there the kind of corroboration that any court in America would ask for? Haven’t seen it. Not yet, at least. But in Bonds’ case, there was enough evidence for a grand jury to hand down an indictment — without Anderson saying a word. Big difference.”
The “big difference” between Bonds and Clemens is the ridiculous benefit-of-the-doubt that the latter receives. Firstly, an indictment is no conviction. Secondly, the media hung Barry out to dry many years before any indictment ever surfaced, and without the aid of the Jayson Stark Legal Defense Fund. Thirdly, an indictment came after a FOUR YEAR INVESITIGATION by the Feds, aided by media vultures and book authors trying to take him down.  Let’s give Roger a 4 year federal investigation plus two best-selling books exposes, and THEN compare.
 
3) Jayson Stark on Sunday: What’s Pettitte’s Price of Admission (Strike Three Swinging!)
As previously stated: “Three Strikes and You’re Out”! This is by far Stark’s most contrived offering. Firstly, it seems that Starks has offered no skepticism in eating up Andy Pettitte’s version for using HGH (note: watch attached link video for Tim Kurkijian acceptance of Pettitte story as gospel truth). Aw shucks, I guess that Andy is just a really honest guy. (BTW, Pettitte is one of THIS author’s favorite players in all of baseball). But Starks main point is this:
“Where’s the outrage over Rodney Harrison, huh? We’ve been waiting for it to show up in some form, any form, for weeks now. We’re still waiting. We’ll probably wait a lifetime. Maybe somebody will write an indignant column about this topic to fill space before the Super Bowl or something. But it’ll come. Then it’ll go. And then Rodney Harrison will go ride off on his parade float and soak in the cheers. Meanwhile, there are baseball fans who will never forgive Andy Pettitte. Never. …you have some confessing to do yourself — about the never-ending double standard applied to baseball and football on this issue.”

Okay, first we need to set the record straight. Rodney Harrison was suspended for 25% of the entire football season for his offense and lost over a million dollars as a result. It is quite possible that Pettitte won’t be suspended one game or lose a nickel. I’d say that I’d rather be Pettitte. Also, while Stark is absolutely 100% correct about the baseball-football double-standard, it is a subject that did receive quite a bit of attention last year after Shawn Merriman tested positive. Even ESPN website colleague Chuck Klosterman wrote the interesting piece on “Why We Look the Other Way” when it comes to football players. But the question for Stark is not: “is he correct” (he is), it is “why are you beating this drum right now — in this article?” In fairness, Stark also brought up the baseball-football double standard after Rick Ankiel got busted, but, to my knowledge, has he ever used the Merriman case to address so much of the hate and vitriol so many of his colleagues throw Barry Bonds’ way. In the Ankiel article, he writes: 

“We live in a world ablaze in double standards. And we’re never more aware of those double standards than we are when stories like these break. …As Ankiel’s saga in particular so vividly demonstrates, we adjust those standards — and taper our level of outrage — depending on whose name happens to wind up in the headline.”

 

And now we are left to wonder: in his vigorous legal defense of Clemens and his immediate defense of Pettitte,  has Stark adjusted HIS OWN level of outrage according to who wound up in the headline? And just because Stark surprisingly never mentioned “race” as a factor in his Rick Ankiel “dirty double-standard” articles, that does not mean that he is naïve to the subject. In May he addressed:

– Fan perceptions: “Citing polls of racial splits amongst fans about Barry Bonds, he writes: “For nearly all white fans who think Bonds has been treated unfairly to say race has nothing to do with it is stunning. We say to those fans: You’re kidding yourselves if that’s what you truly think.” And then addressed…
– Media perceptions: “[Race] is an element in how people are perceiving the way all of us [media] portray this man [Bonds]. And I don’t think anything we do or say or write can change that.”
And this last sentence is precisely where the disagreement lies. Has racial bias subconsciously played a role in Stark’s own reaction? Or is he simply influenced through a favorable personal relationship with Clemens and Pettitte? Or is another factor at play? In any case, the media DOES have power in how Bonds is perceived: by affording Bonds the very same LEGAL standard of proof afforded to Clemens, the same benefit of the doubt immediately afforded to Pettitte’s story, and the same defensive passion that any other baseball player might receive. To my knowlege, Stark has never been one to "bash" Bonds, but until he will actually FIGHT for fairness in Bonds coverage will he truly distinguish himself from those that do.