Mark Gilroy

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Mark Gilroy February 26, 2008

Who Framed Roger Clemens?

Life is 10% what happens to you and 90% how you respond to it. So they say. But are they right? There’s undoubtedly enough anecdotal evidence of those who have overcome hardships and tragedies with faith, optimism, and resilience — and conversely, enough examples of those who squandered advantages, blessings, and favor through pessimism, lack of discipline, and feelings of entitlement – to suggest yes, “they” are probably right. To some degree or another.

There’s a parallel theorem that’s back in the news.

Outside of murdering your wife while wearing a new pair of Aris Isotoner Light gloves (if the gloves are too small, don’t wear them at all), your opportunity to rehabilitate a damaged reputation is 10% what you’ve done in the first place and 90% how you own up to it.

Don’t hold me to that exact ratio but if you don’t believe there’s at least some truth to it, just ask Richard Nixon how effective cover ups are when you’ve obviously broken the rules – and get caught. Bill Clinton looked us right in the eyes, wagged a finger in our direction, and declared, “I did not have …” in his attempt to follow in Nixon’s presidential footsteps. Consumed by arguments of the definition of “is,” his presidency was never the same even if he wasn’t removed from office following his impeachment.

Maybe Roger Clemens never took steroids and was amazingly unaware that others around him, including his colleagues and wife, were doing so. But if he did, his legacy will be tarnished more by his theatrical declarations of innocence than anything he did in an era of baseball when it is estimated that at least two-thirds of Major League Baseball was ingesting some kind of performance enhancer. So who framed Roger Clemens? If he’s found guilty … just ask him!

POSTSCRIPT: He was found guilty and his reputation seems to be permanently damaged.

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Filed Under: Life Observations, Sports

Comments

  1. Anonymous says

    February 27, 2008 at 12:32 pm

    Agree mostly but would note that some offenses will never be forgiven in the court of public opinion. I guess that’s why you made the O.J. glove reference. –ZL

  2. Anonymous says

    February 27, 2008 at 3:01 pm

    Who Framed Roger Clemens?
    Who Framed Roger Rabbit?

    The connection between the two is clearly the isotoner gloves. :O

  3. Anonymous says

    February 27, 2008 at 6:37 pm

    As a baseball fan, I agree and would have appreciated a humble apology. I think poor Rocket has bumbled his way down a very slippery path. However, I recently heard this comment that I think has an interesting point: Since there’s a war going on right now, doesn’t Congress have other more pressing issues they should be handling?

  4. Mark Gilroy says

    February 27, 2008 at 6:42 pm

    Good point on whether Congress should be involved in Major League Baseball in light of other pressing issues. Those who think that government should step in often argue for this on the basis of (a) the place of baseball in American culture; and (b) baseball is a big enough business — and there are many ancillary businesses linked to it (i.e. gambling) — the American public deserves to know that it is being played fairly.

    • TraCia says

      October 3, 2014 at 2:08 pm

      Randy,The US Government does not control any top level domian servers outside of .mil and .gov. They control the root servers as a function of the Department of Commerce, but these root servers only point to the TLD’s and they have no authority over the TLD zone itself, just like a TLD zone has no control over what you define in a zone configuration below it.Although they used to be controlled by the Department of Commerce, Verisign controls .com and .net and has for the foreseeable past. PRI controls .org.Because of this, can you provide information about the website that was disabled via DNS?

  5. Heather says

    February 28, 2008 at 1:07 pm

    Being a huge Astros fan, and just a baseball fan in general I wanted to believe him that he didn’t do it, and I listened to the senate hearing because I wanted to hear him prove MacNamee wrong.. but when I heard him say that he didn’t know what HGH was until a “couple days ago” etc. I knew he was lying- that sealed the deal for me… and it broke my heart that he is so harsh with his lies- I just wonder what he and his HGH using wife have told their kids- how are they explaining lying to Congress or are they lying to their kids as well??

  6. Mark Gilroy says

    February 28, 2008 at 1:51 pm

    Heather — it’s when die-hard fans like you stop believing in him that Roger has really lost the PR battle.

Mark is a publisher, author, consultant, blogger, positive thinker, believer, encourager, and family guy. A resident of Brentwood, Tennessee, he has six kids, with one in college and five out in the "real world." Read More…

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