The D-backs '01 World Series title isn't tainted and never will be


Former Arizona Diamondbacks pitcher Curt Schilling said something earlier this week on a Philadelphia radio station that has people all fired up (imagine that).

Here is what Schilling said.

"Anybody who ever says performance-enhancing drugs didn't help players produce offensive numbers is full of crap." And with those numbers came championships that Schilling claims were tainted. "There isn't a team in the last 20 years that has won clean."

Let me be clear: I don't think the Diamondbacks' 2001 World Series title is tainted.

I, also, believe Schilling was 100% correct when he said there hasn't been a World Series won in the past 20 years that didn't have a player using a PED.

Why are we questioning and/or surprised by this?

I'm not going to go through each World Series team and try to guess, or go through each World Series team and see if a player has been linked. It's not worth my time.

Just because a player wasn't outed by a trainer, the Mitchell Report or a former teammate doesn't mean they weren't using PEDs. And if they were, it doesn't mean they necessarily did use PEDs (although that's very unlikely). The past decade has proved to us that there were players using PEDs and there still are in the current season (see Ramirez, Manny).

Hundreds of names have been linked to PEDs already. I'm not trying to name names or accuse specific people, but I'm going to say I believe there are hundreds of others out there that haven't been linked (I'm talking across baseball -- not necessarily just Major League Baseball). If that shocks, surprises or makes you think I'm throwing blind darts after I've had a 12-pack then I feel sorry for you.

Back to 2001, the title isn't tainted. It was an even playing field. Did each team have the same number of players taking steroids? No. But they all had access to the same stuff and were all taking the same tests -- or in this case lack of tests.

It was the era, the time frame of the game. Right or wrong isn't getting decided here. Arguing and comparing records of the past and what will be in the "clean" future isn't the case either. We're discussing if a title was tainted.

The 2001 Diamondbacks were playing the game just as any other team in baseball was that season and at the end of the day they were the team holding the golden flag poles with pennants above their heads.

---

TY's Outtakes

What I learned this week…

This was easy. I learned what a "haboob" was. I had never heard that word before Tuesday evening and now I will never forget it.

Tweet of the week…

I hear Wimbledon champ likes eating grass too. Hope he enjoyed it. Nothing beats Tiger Stadium grass though.less than a minute ago via TweetDeck Favorite Retweet Reply

Great tweet, coach.

Suggestion of the week…

Tyler Bassett is a columnist for ArizonaSports.com. He can be reached with your questions and comments by e-mail here and can follow him on Twitter @Tyler_Bassett, or you can be friends with him on Facebook. All of Tyler Bassett's past columns.
2 Comments   |   Join the conversation »
  • Add A Comment 
  • Abuse
    Brian's Mojito wrote...
    No
    Steve Finley was with Caminiti in both Houston and San Diego. Finley's HR total jumped from 10 to 30 in 1996 with the Padres. The big hero Luis Gonzalez was with Sosa and the Cubs, the Astros in 1997, the roided Phil Nevin and Damian Easley's Tigers in 1998. Gonzalez's HR total went from 10 in 1997 to 57 in 2001. Come on? Finley and Gonzalez reunited in AZ in 1999. They convinced Jay Bell and Matt Williams, two veterans in the twilights of their careers, into juicing too. Bell and Williams each hit 20 in 2000. Bell hit 38 in 2001, Williams hit 35 in 2001.
  • Abuse
    GoCards90 wrote...
    I'm with Brian
    We were definitely juicing but so was 90% of that Yankees team.
Home | Contact Us | Advertise With Us | Copyright Policy | Terms Of Use | Privacy Policy | Contest Rules | Employment Opportunities | EEO Public File Report
Copyright © 2013 Bonneville International. All rights reserved.