The summer before Lance
Armstrong won his first Tour de France, Mark McGwire was the biggest star in
American sport. As he closed in on Roger Maris’ single-season record of 61 home
runs, the St. Louis Cardinals’ slugger captivated a nation. Each day of the
1998 campaign fans watched to see if this outsized character who looked like a
corn-fed farm boy straight out of the Midwest could break one of the landmark
records in the game. Three years after a divisive baseball strike, McGwire and
his rival Sammy Sosa were credited with helping America fall back in love with
the national pastime.
When it emerged that
McGwire (and Sosa) needed a little chemical help to shatter Maris’ record, the
bloom suddenly went off the rose. As frauds go, it was one of the biggest ever
perpetrated in any sport and was made much worse by the player’s subsequent
unrepentant attitude towards revelations his feats had been steroid-fuelled.
After making a fool of himself with an evasive and tongue-tied performance in
front of a Congressional committee in 2005, McGwire went completely off the
grid for a few years. During that time in exile, he was often held up by PR
people as an example of how not to handle a drugs scandal.
Then something amazing happened
that explains exactly why Lance Armstrong may be going into full-on mea culpa
mode with Oprah Winfrey next Thursday. Just before emerging from hiding to
start a job as hitting coach with the Cardinals, McGwire gave a kinda, sorta,
not quite apology during a teary interview with Bob Costas, the doyen of
baseball broadcasters. At his first home game a few weeks later, the Cardinals’
fans cheered him to the rafters and after three hugely successful seasons
during which he returned seamlessly to the sport, the Los Angeles Dodgers recently
signed McGwire to do the same job for them.
The lesson is that if
you say sorry, even without going into much detail, many Americans are willing
to forgive and forget. Quite readily in fact, judging by the numbers lining up
to get McGwire’s autograph at stadiums all across this country over the past
three years. This is what Armstrong and his people were counting on when they
laid the groundwork by leaking the news he was considering a tell-all a couple
of weeks back. Aside from the fact this was the only real play he had left,
they know he isn’t breaking new ground here. Long is the list of American
athletes who have discovered the benefit of confessing, repenting and
returning.
It will help
Armstrong’s cause immeasurably that some fans in these parts will readily
accept his explanation because they view sport as just another branch of the
entertainment industry anyway. Much like when they are watching stunts in
action movies, they don’t care what sleights of hand are involved as long as
they get to see something wondrous produced. Whether you took EPO to ride your
bike faster or to hit the ball farther doesn’t bother a large section of the
population. This much was brought home again this past week listening to
baseball fans expressing outrage that “sanctimonious” journalists were keeping
proven steroid cheats/their heroes out of the game’s Hall of Fame.
These are the same
people who will listen to Armstrong talking to Winfrey and conclude that
everybody else was at it too so he did nothing wrong. Indeed, this demographic
will vouchsafe that since all other cyclists had access to the same
pharmaceuticals, he was still the best of a bad bunch. Plenty others have counted
on and capitalised on this type of ignorance and moral equivocation in recent
years. A pitcher called Andy Pettite remains one of the most popular New York
Yankees even though he was caught using HGH. The same fan base forgave Alex
Rodriguez his lengthier steroid use the moment he starred in a World Series victory.
When it comes to this
particular topic, it’s always been difficult for people in Europe to understand
that there is very little stigma attached to steroid use in America. Perhaps
it’s the presence of so many performance-enhancing substances in a lot of local
gyms. Maybe it’s to do with “if you ain’t cheatin’, you ain’t tryin’” being one
of the first truisms children learn when they take up competitive sport. Whatever the reason, getting caught using hardly
ever does long-term damage.
Bill Romanowski was an
NFL linebacker, most notably with the Denver Broncos, who featured prominently
in the BALCO investigation that brought down Marion Jones and shattered the myth
of Barry Bonds. Famously, Romanowski was once sued by a team-mate who accused him
of assault while suffering from ‘roid rage during a training ground fight.
Eventually, he came clean about the extent of his steroid use during his career
and, yes, you may guess where this is going, he’s now all over radio and TV
analysing grid-iron. No stigma required.
Across the Atlantic,
that type of horrific resume would have doomed somebody to a life on the
fringes of sport. Over here, as Armstrong well knows, it was a mere bump in the
road, an unedifying chapter in a larger life story. Jones herself may have
alienated the athletics world but having taken the Oprah Winfrey confessional
option she was welcomed into the WNBA with open arms when she picked up a
basketball again in 2010. That she had conspired to spectacularly cheat in
another code wasn’t even an issue as parents brought their little girls to line
up for her autograph at Tulsa Shock games.
Of all the major
baseball players associated with steroids, Barry Bonds remains the one most
obviously in the wilderness. Why? Because he has never offered a full and frank
account of why he did what he did, preferring to stick to the lame, tired, old
“I didn’t know what I was taking” excuse. In a sport which cherishes its former
players like no other, Bonds currently has no role to play in baseball and
probably won’t until he performs some sort of public act of contrition. Don’t
think for a minute that Armstrong hasn’t seen the contrast between where Bonds
and McGwire stand today, and decided which one he wants to be.
(This piece first
appeared in the Irish Mail on Sunday on January 13th, 2013)
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