Hard Hits


Former Stetson star and current Staten Island Yankee third baseman Braedyn Pruitt joined Hard Hits last night.

Earlier this morning, we were delighted to have Staten Island Yankee third baseman Braedyn Pruitt join us for a special edition of Hard Hits.

Selected out of Stetson University, the 14th round pick finished second in the NY-Penn League in hitting batting .347 with four home runs and 32 RBI’s in 51 games mostly as the team’s cleanup hitter.

The 22 year-old out of West Palm Beach, Florida came on to discuss the Bombers’ 8-4 Game 1 defeat to archrival Brooklyn last night at home and what they’ll need to do to turn the tide when the three-game first round series shifts to the other side of the Verrazano Bridge later tonight.

He also talked about his first pro season as well as other team oriented stuff, etc.

Please be sure to go to our host page over at Blogtalk Radio and check out the archive:

Hard Hits

Hope you enjoy it and thanks for the support! :)

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Defense Attorney John Lauro answers reporters questions about his troubled client forner NBA referee Tim Donaghy.

In light of recent devastating news which affected the NBA when former referee Tim Donaghy was connected with a betting scandal and pleaded guilty in a Brooklyn federal court Wednesday where he now could face up to 25 years behind bars for the conspiracy to fix NBA games dating as far back as 2003, one can’t help but take notice of how other sports fans have reacted to this scandal.

In a superstar driven league where select players have gotten the ’star treatment’ in big games, some who questioned that level of officiating felt validated by the recent charges the 40 year-old Donaghy faces.

An NBA referee for 13 years, the Bradenton Florida resident was best known for two prior incidents in games including the ugly brawl which took place in Detroit between the Pistons and Pacers on November 19, 2004.

The other was a technical foul assessed to then Trail Blazer Rasheed Wallace in 2003 for throwing a ball at another official during a game. After the game, Donaghy was met by an aggravated Wallace who allegedly cursed and threatened him outside the loading area.
At the time, the league investigated and suspended Wallace seven games which then became the longest suspension not pertaining to drugs or violence.

Off the court, Donaghy had issues with a Pennsylvania neighbor in which he was said to have harassed then before a lawsuit was filed, forcing the NBA to keep him off their roster for the 2006 second round of the playoffs.

When the latest discouraging news came down from the FBI last month, the proverbial writing was on the wall.

The evidence found the troubled ref in gambling debt where he then bet thousands of dollars on NBA games the past couple of seasons.

It forced league commisioner David Stern to hold a public press conference and emphasize that officials aren’t permitted to bet on games. In fact, they’re only allowed to go to the race track during the offseason.

The league wasn’t aware of Donaghy’s recent history and Stern referred to it as “an isolated case involving an NBA referee who engaged not only in a violation of our rules, but in criminal conduct” and “the most serious situation and worst situation that I have ever experienced” in 40 years with the NBA.

Regardless, it definitely was a severe hit to the league’s credibility which was already on downspiral with record-low ratings for a dreadful NBA Final in which the Spurs swept the Cavaliers.

With the league trying to clean up its act on and off the court in terms of how their players handle themselves, this was the last thing they needed.

Other fans from rival sports laughed at the news with a few, ‘I told you so’s’ about this scandal.

But what if the shoe was on the other foot? How would these fans act if the same disturbing news came down about their own league? They’d be outraged and probably act stunned.

There’s no way it could happen. Right? Think again.

In competitive sports, most are put into the trust of a an official(s) hands. Kids’ games must have unbiased people involved to make key calls and keep proper order so that heated battles don’t spiral out of control. Something that can happen when tempers flare in the heat of the moment.
That’s where sports officials come in. Their respective jobs are to referee to the best of their abilities and not get in the way of a closely contested game. How do you know when they’re doing their job? When both sides aren’t constantly on them and afterwards, tell them they handled the game well.

How would I know? My father happens to be a referee who can work four sports: baseball, basketball, lacrosse and soccer.

During almost a two decade career, I’ve caught some of his games and tried to be objective when critiquing how he did. For the most part, he does a good job but there have been times where even I questioned a few calls.

That’s the nature of a referee. They’re there to do a job. Many observers think they could be one. I’ve seen and heard some pretty silly stuff at games. One fan even got on my nerves this past year during a basketball game because they were constantly on the refs and almost got into it with a home fan at the half.

That should never happen.I scoff at fans who take it to that level.

The thing which must be remembered about officials is they’re human and can make mistakes such as one at first that cost the Cardinals the 1985 World Series against the Royals.

It happens. Officials aren’t perfect.

So could what happened in the NBA happen in other sports? Sure.

A perfect sport would be the NHL. And I can hear all my hockey brethren yelling and screaming at the thought.

Why hockey? Well, for starters, it’s not that high scoring. A majority of games can be decided by a goal.

Imagine the stakes of a tie game for all the marbles late in the third period. And one of the refs has something on the line. Suddenly, a penalty is called much to the fans of the other side’s dispute.

The team gets a power play and scores with seconds to spare to win the Stanley Cup. But the real winner was that ref who made a killing by making a questionable call which helped decide the winner.

How easy would this be? That’s what professional sports leagues such as the NHL, NBA, MLB, NFL, MLS and even ATP and WTA fear most.

You can be a good ref or bad one. But leagues are entrusting you to do the best job possible without even a thought such as this creeping in their minds.

Just imagine the possibilities.

We’ve seen gambling prominent in fixing European World Soccer leagues where officials were on the take. Boxing has had problems for years with the legitimacy of judges for a long time. They should just rename them three blind mice. It would make it a much easier and more laughable process.

Recently, an ATP Tour match featuring fourth ranked Russian Nikolay Davydenko came into question due to bets being placed on the heavy underdog Martin Vassallo Arguello as the match neared. The number remained abnormally high even after Davydenko took the first set.

Shockingly, Davydenko retired due to a foot injury tied at a set apiece trailing 1-2 early in the final set forcing cancelations of those bets and skepticism. Since, he’s denied any involvement. Professional tennis sure hopes so.

The matter is being looked into by the ATP with cooperation from British horse racing authorities with experience to oversee if there was a scam involving online bookmaker Betfair which voided bets on Davydenko’s opponent earlier this month in Poland.

What about baseball or football? All it would take is one pivotal call in a tight game late which could swing the balance one way.

In baseball, there can be a number of close plays involving throws to first or at other bases including home plate. The plate umpire’s strike zone also factors into how the game is called and gives ballplayers a better idea of what to swing at.

What if an umpire called it one way? Think that wouldn’t draw attention? The good umpires are consistent for both sides.

In football, there are always issues it seems even with their replay system where you often wonder if they’re at a peep show instead of reviewing a key play because it takes so long.

And here’s the scary aspect. Even after a few of those lengthy review sessions, there was doubt as to whether they actually got it right.

The same could also be said for the NHL which seems to be haunted by this dilemma almost every season. Even when they didn’t play a couple of years ago, they were getting blamed.

Video review must be conclusive to overturn a call on the ice. So it explains why Daniel Briere’s potential tying goal was wiped out against the Rangers in a second round match at Madison Square Garden. The initial ruling was “no goal” on the ice.

But these types of reviews aren’t always cut and dry due to camera availability and sometimes an obstructed view due to Gatorade bottles on top of the net which can make the decision making even tougher.

While the video review is there to doublecheck and get things right, could it really stop a ref from taking over a game and calling a slew of penalties on one side to try to influence a result on the ice? That’s a tough one.

We’ve all seen officials at their worst. Just imagine if doubt starts to enter the equation. It’s troubling.

I’ve been following sports for 20-plus years. At this point, I have to put some faith in the people who are on these games.

These officials are there for a reason. Because they have worked their way up and built up their reputations. If they’re anything like my Dad, then they take a tremendous amount of pride doing their jobs and getting calls right.

It might not be a perfect process but until some crazy machine is invented in the future, it’s the best we can do.

Just hope they’re there for one purpose. To be the best they can be.

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Barry Bonds became the all-time home run king Tuesday night in San Francisco. Bonds rounds the bases after HR No.757 Wednesday night.

Hard Hits: The case of Barry Bonds

by Derek Felix

It had to happen eventually. Tuesday night at Pac Bell (AT&T Park) out on the Bay, there was officially a new home run king 33 years later supplanting Hank Aaron.

For some passionate baseball observers, it was a regrettable day because of who made history. Sadly, that’s the kind of reaction one of the game’s greatest players, Barry Bonds initiates.

The seven-time NL MVP had been chasing Aaron for a couple of years fighting off nagging injuries to finally tie and pass Homerin’ Hank, who surprisingly taped a congratulatory message which appeared the other night on the San Francisco scoreboard after his record was finally broken.

It happened in the fifth inning against Washington pitcher Mike Bacsik, who became the 446th pitcher to serve one up to Bonds. As it turned out a night later, he wouldn’t be the last.
The 43 year-old former Pittsburgh Pirates No.1 pick (sixth overall in 1985) was already two-for-two in the game when he worked the count full. Bacsik didn’t pitch around instead challenging him with a fastball which Bonds clocked to deep right center for the milestone.

As he connected, the All-Star slugger pumped his fist and watched it before finally going into his home run trot and then being congratulated at home plate by his son as well as family and teammates. Included was his godfather Willie Mays who gave him a hug. To say he was blessed would be an understatement.

Then the superstar graciously thanked all of San Francisco along with his family for their support in what had been a difficult climb to the finish. Especially when one considers that three years ago, he had 703 home runs after concluding 2004 with 45 in 147 games. Then came offseason knee surgery along with the chaotic BALCO investigation as he took almost the entire following season off before returning late to tack on five more in just 42 at bats.

As Game of Shadows was released last year which documented some very damaging accounts of what Bonds put into his body, the Giants’ left fielder got into 130 games and added 26 dingers in 367 at bats (14.1 avg) to his total, giving him 734 entering this record breaking season.

In better shape, he started out like a house of fire knocking eight out of the park in April while hitting .356 with 17 RBI’s. But what would transpire was an up and down struggle to the finish line.

Finally after a subpar July in which he batted only .186 with four dingers to crawl within two of the record, Bonds needed only six games to match Aaron and then surpass him this month. After tying the former Brave 33 years later in San Diego, he made history to take his place in baseball’s record book.

A night later, he’d quickly add to it by hammering a 1-1 Tim Redding offering into McCovey Cove 438 feet for his 35th career splash (yes they actually keep that crazy stat) which became No.757 in a 5-0 Giants win- giving manager Bruce Bochy career win 1,000.

It was Bonds’ 23rd homer of the season. He finished 1-for-2 before exiting. He has 23 long balls in 269 at bats this summer which averages out to one every 11.7 plate appearances. Compared to last year, it’s a decent pace but still pales in comparison to what he did only a few years ago.

Age is a funny thing. One minute, the stars we watch are putting up big numbers. The next, they’re barely hanging on as decline has finally taken its course.

Lately, so much has been made of how Bonds did it. What should’ve been a huge deal instead was just shrugged off with a slump of the shoulders by many because of recent history which suggests that his remarkable accomplishment was tainted.

A New York Post headline read, “Big sh*t” Wednesday. Considering that this same paper a couple of months ago had Yankee Alex Rodriguez stepping out on his wife with a stripper in Toronto, their credibility was already in as much question as the controversial slugger they had to get a cheapshot in on.

So this rag hit rock bottom with that classless front page. One I’ll never read again.

These days, sometimes the media takes it too far. When is enough enough? Many have acted like Bonds owed them something. We’re mostly talking about a lot of the mainstream writers who have covered baseball as well as other sports and sit behind their laptops or pcs hiding while judging the players they cover. As if they knew exactly what kind of dedication it took to be a star athlete. Heck. It doesn’t even have to be that. It could just be an everyday player who busts their ass.

Most sportswriters wouldn’t know the first thing about the kind of extreme levels these athletes put themselves through. So maybe they should stick to what they know.

As for myself, I was a long distance cross country runner in high school. So I do have an idea of how much preparation goes into getting ready for every race. Like many, I played sports when I was younger. Who doesn’t like to get out there and compete? Challenging yourself athletically is a real adrenaline rush.

Being able to cover minor league ballplayers these days, I don’t sit here trying to pretend I know every little thing these guys do. But what I realize is how hard they have worked just to get to this point in their pro careers. It takes an awful lot of commitment.

Did Bonds cheat? Probably. If he did, who’s at fault? A lot of players probably juiced during the period in question. The question which never seems to be asked is if this was such an epidemic, why didn’t Major League Baseball (MLB) step up to the plate and do something about it?

Up until our federal government stepped in and got involved with the well known BALCO investigation, baseball didn’t have any rules permitting players abusing performance enhancers.

Finally, commisioner Bud Selig and his cronies got involved and changed the rules dramatically even going as far to ban amphetamines (greenies) last year. Those had been around for half a century and you can bet plenty of the stars our parents and grandparents grew up idolizing used them to get by.

The point being that bending the rules had been going on in baseball for a lot longer than most want to acknowledge. The big difference is that back then, players of that Golden Era were more respected and weren’t front and center on papers for all to see. Their private lives were private which is really how it should be.

Today, everyone’s trying to get a good story and make a name for themselves. A few will do whatever it takes even going as far as to sneak into George Steinbrenner’s home by lying just to find out the Yankee Boss isn’t all there anymore. Like it was some big secret.

Does any of this change who Bonds is and how he’ll be looked at in the future? Probably not. Before he came into question after 1998, he had already hit 411 homers (first 176 as a Pirate), become part of the 40/40 Club (1996), won three MVPs, eight Gold Gloves, taken part in eight All-Star Games and seven Silver Sluggers.

That btw was all before he turned 34 the following summer and started ‘experimenting.’ From 1999-2004, he slugged 292 dingers including a new modern-day single season record of 73 in 2001 which passed Mark McGwire’s 70 set back in ‘98 when he and Sammy Sosa smashed Roger Maris’ 1961 record of 61.

That was the summer which helped save baseball and was widely celebrated if you recall. Nobody seemed to mind that the two players looked like a combination of professional bodybuilders and wrestlers.

One well known writer across the country even wrote a book about that epic home run race and made a lot of money off them. Years later, that same person would be crying foul and ripping into those same players along with Bonds and admitted user and current Yankee Jason Giambi. Kind of seems like they’re talking out of both sides, huh?

My stance on the Juiced Era is that baseball turned a blind eye to what was going on. They were far too preoccupied pushing the Chicks Dig The Longball ad campaign. You remember it. Every baseball fan does. Message. Hit as many homers as possible.
They bared the responsibility for what took place. You think Bonds didn’t notice all the positive feedback both McGwire and Sosa got? Both were star players but not on the level of Barry.

You just can’t have it both ways. Maybe we all just didn’t want to notice. I can still recall a funny skit on the old Wcw where wrestler Marcus “Buff” Bagwell dressed in a Cardinals jersey and pretended to be Big Mac and joked about steroids to boos in St. Louis on Monday Nite Nitro. It was quite hilarious but turned out to be prophetic for baseball and now wrestling.

Who can you trust these days? It’s a difficult question to answer. One can only hope that A-Rod is clean as he begins his chase of Bonds. The youngest slugger to ever reach 500 home runs at age 32, the current Yankee third baseman looks to have some prime years left.

With great power to all fields and a natural home run stroke, many will follow the future $30 million man’s pursuit. If he finishes with 50 homers this year (needs 14 more), A-Rod will be at 514 for his career. If he averages 40-per-season over the next five, that would put him at 714 at the age of 37. Who thinks he can’t get to that point? He keeps himself in phenomenal shape and rarely is on the DL.

Rodriguez is someone the general public will pull for to become the new home run king no matter what former Bash Brother and knucklehead Jose Canseco says. Talk about turning your back. The first ever player to 40/40 should meet Benedict Arnold. They have plenty in common.

So where do we stand on Bonds? He’s still a great player with phenomenal ability and should be a first ballot Hall of Famer regardless of all the questions as to the validity of his record.

We’re talking about a player who hit over 500 homers and stole over 500 as well. A guy who was also a dangerous hitter with one of the best eyes ever to step into a batter’s box. The ridiculous amount of walks (2,540) which increase daily are definitive proof.

What else is there to say of a guy who got the most out of his God given talent?

Well, he never was the most lovable which might explain why the media grew to loathe him as did fans. He’s just never been an engaging athlete. Had he had a different persona, does anyone really believe he’d be painted as being so evil even if he did cheat? I’m having a hard time with that one. It’s up to the general public.

Love or hate him, Bonds will always be part of baseball history and take his place among the all-time greats.

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We’ll be on the air discussing more on the Chris Benoit family tragedy.

It certainly has been a bizarre couple of days since the WWE star wrestler’s body was discovered along with his wife Nancy better known as Woman to wrestling fans along with youngest son Daniel at their Atlanta Georgia home.

At present, evidence points to a double murder suicide. It’s hard to fathom. One wonders if that will stand up after they further analyze everything. I guess only time shall tell.

One thing for sure. We’ll be on the air to discuss the sad topic:

Hard Hits

The number to call in is 646-652-2543.

See ya’ll later.

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Aside from blogging, I also host my own one hour show entitled Hard Hits over at Blog Talk Radio.

Tonight’s show airs live from 9 ET/6PT and runs till 10ET/7PT. To check it out live, it can be found here:

Hard Hits Live
Listen Live

Among topics which will be discussed are the NBA Finals, Yankees/Mets, Roger Clemens and Rafael Nadal’s three-peat at Roland Garros which prevented Roger Federer from making Grand Slam history for the second consecutive year.

There also might be some other surprises. You’ll just have to find out what’s on our mind later on.

For other show archives, you can go to our host page and pull them up here:

http://blogtalkradio.com/hostpage.aspx?host_id=2402
Hope you check us out later tonight or in the future as we air more shows during what should be a busy summer.

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