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Baseball copes with Barry Bonds and the stigma of steroids
Chasing down and topping a fabled sports milestone should be a time of thrills and anticipation. But baseball star Barry Bonds found the going tough this spring as he closed in on Babe Ruth (714) and Hank Aaron (755) on the career home run list. Critics accuse Bonds of using steroids, substances that enhance performance. Newspaper sports pages crackle with the controversy, with fans lined up for and against Bonds. The San Francisco slugger is not the only baseball star suspected of using steroids. But he's got the most attention as he closed in on Ruth and Aaron's high-profile home run records. Some pundits want Bonds' baseball achievements to include an asterisk to indicate he cheated -- as opposed to swat king Aaron, who got the record with determination and training. However, Bonds denies knowingly using steroids. According to the San Francisco Chronicle, the slugger told investigators that a trainer gave him creams for ailments. But Bonds believed them to be legal substances, flaxseed oil and a balm for arthritis, he said.
Front Page Talking Points is written by
Felix Grabowski and Alan Stamm for NIEonline.com, Copyright 2013
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