commentary &humor &journalism &rants &sports 17 May 2009 02:49 pm
More Evidence that Roger Clemens has a Family History of Heart Disease
For those who don’t follow sports news, here is a brief recap. Roger Clemens has been accused of having taken performance enhancing drugs during part of the time he was a star Major League Baseball pitcher. The initial accusations came in a report issued by former Senator George Mitchell whose special commission investigated all claims of steroid use by Major League Baseball players. Additionally, Clemens’ trainer, Brian McNamee has testified that he injected Clemens with steroids. McNamee even kept the hypodermic syringes and turned them over to investigators who found Clemens’ DNA on the needles. Nevertheless, Clemens denies ever taking performance enhancing drugs (most of which are now banned by Major League Baseball, but were not during most of Clemens active career). Clemens is now under investigation by a Federal grand jury for perjury allegedly committed when he testified before Congress in February 2008.
Earlier this week, after more than a year of silence, Clemens went on ESPN Radio and again insisted that he has never taken performance enhancing drugs. Interestingly, he said, “Brian McNamee never injected me with steroids or HGH.” The interviewers, Mike Greenberg and Mike Golic of the “Mike & Mike” show completely blew it by not following up that statement with questions like, “Did Brian McNamee ever inject you with any substance?” It’s possible that someone else gave Clemens his steroids, but McNamee gave him the female fertility drug (the one for which Manny Ramirez tested positive) that players use to try to mask the steroids. Another follow-up might have been, “Did anyone ever inject you with steroids or HGH?” But it seems ESPN is sympathetic to Clemens, getting down on bended knee for his new Public Relations firm. Greenberg later said he thought he did a fair interview, “straight down the middle”, in his words. I agree it was right down the middle, like a softball pitch. Still Clemens whiffed because the entire setup was bogus. He tried to make it sound like the timing of the interview was based on the fact that he was about to go on vacation and not really directly related to the book American Icon: The Fall of Roger Clemens and the Rise of Steroids in America’s Pastime that was released the same day. Clemens only wanted to chat with his buddies “Greeny” and “Golie” (as he called them during the interview). “Book? What book? Oh yeah, I heard something about it but it’s all garbage.” I wonder if Greeny and Golie vote for MLB Hall of Fame candidates. I hope not.
The doozy of the interview was Clemens claim that he has a family history of heart disease and it would be “suicidal” for him to take dangerous steroids (as if steroid and other drug users think about long-term consequences when they’re shooting up). Part of his claim to having a family history of heart disease was, he said, “My stepfather had a heart attack.” Now THOSE are some powerful genes.
The family history revelations prompted me to do my own exhaustive investigations into Clemens’ family history of heart disease. Here’s what I found:
- Clemens’ golf caddy’s cousin lives next door to a guy who had a heart attack
- Clemens’ friend Dick Cheney has had 97 heart attacks and has 12 pace makers and 8 diesel-powered backup pacemakers and a Clemens’ autographed defibrilator that he keeps in Rush Limbaugh’s broadcast booth
- When he drives to a local high school to pitch batting practice, Clemens drives by the Baylor Heart Clinic and they have loads of people in there with heart disease
- 28% of Texans who die each year die of heart disease and .0000000001 % of Texans become seven-time Cy Young award winners; do the math
- Clemens’ vacation house, which has no contact whatsoever with the outside world, especially information about new books written by veteran investigative journalists from the New York Daily News, was built by a guy who later had a heart attack; and now the place has plumbing problems–scary stuff, so you know there’s NO WAY Clemens would be taking any dangerous steroids or HGH out there
- Jose Canseco has not had a heart attack, but he got his brains beat in by 5’9″ sportscaster Vai Sikahema in the first round of a celebrity boxing match; When Clemens reaches his desperate years he wants to be able to at least go at least two rounds against Sikahema, so you know there’s NO WAY he would ever touch any dangerous drugs!