What the Mitchell Report Teaches Us …

I have been running around all afternoon and didn’t listen to much of the Mitchell Report coverage. Well, other than watching Donald Fehr bury his head in the sand and scoff at the report.

Anyhow, I finally had a chance to peruse the Mitchell Report (you can view all 400+ pages here) and it was interesting to see the names that popped up in the report.

Of course, everyone is talking about Roger Clemens, Barry Bonds, Eric Gagne, Andy Pettite and the other “all-stars” that showed up on the list.

But, it is the “no-names” that capture my attention and are the ones that I really expected to see more of. Guys like Kent Mercker, Mike Stanton, Adam Piatt and Adam Riggs. Those players that are middle of the road and really needed to have some type of advantage to make or stay in “the Show”.

What have we learned from the Mitchell Report?

A couple of things …

  1. Those that have the most to lose will take the most chances
  2. The difference between the elite and the best is a very fine line

Can we condem baseball players for doing this? I don’t know. Part of me wants to see them strung up, but the other side can see how it would be easy to get caught up in the moment.

Adam Riggs - Steubenville, ohio - Mitchell Steroid ReportTake Steubenville, Ohio, native Adam Riggs, right, as an example. This kid was always known as a scrappy ballplayer, one of those “tough as nails” types that could hit for power and steal some bases in the minors. He stalled out as a 4A player and never made it to the next level. He was able to play 61 major leagues but didn’t produce enough — .216-3-10 — to even get part-time status as a utility player.

Now take into consideration that he earned the major league base salary — roughly $200,000 — for those four years. That is roughly $175,000 more than he would have earned at AAA (the average is about $3,000 – $5,000 per month for a player of Riggs’ experience) it is easier to understand the “need” these players have.

But, does that make it right?

In theory, of course not. In practice, now that makes it a much tougher question. Of course, I want to answer that I would have been happy to “walk away” with my pride in tact. That sounds great and all the sports reporters will have you believe that this is what they’d have done. But come on, I’ve seen guys thrown under the bus for a COMPLIMENT what along $150,000 in cash.

Human nature is to “one-up” your competition — and you are going to do everything within your power to make this happen. If an environment is one that the rules become “guidelines” as opposed to the law, then you are creating an opportunity for the “hens to rule the roost”.

Hmm … does this sound like another industry right now?

The real estate and mortgage industry is the right answer. There was a lot of money to be made and during that period a lot of people — the government included — looked the other way and ignored the signs of the slowing market.

So what has all this taught us?

Take care of yourself, because when the going gets tough — others will start looking for scapegoats.

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About the Author

Sadie Lynn is the Boxer of Toby Boyce, a REALTOR with Keller Williams Consultants Realty, and Mrs. Toby. Sadie has been hearing more than she can take about real estate and Delaware since Toby became an agent in July. So, she decided to take into her own hands and created this site to share her new knowledge. Enjoy, my take on Delaware, Ohio and real estate as a general.