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Steroid admission just the beginning for A-Rod

by Ken Rosenthal

Ken Rosenthal has been the senior baseball writer for FOXSports.com since Aug. 2005. He appears weekly on the FSN Baseball Report and MLB on FOX.


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Updated: February 9, 2009, 11:19 PM EST
Comment
If Alex Rodriguez thinks this is over, he's nuts.

The best player in the game just admitted to using performance-enhancing drugs for three years — three years!

Sorry, I don't think too many people are going to react by saying, "Gee, Alex. Thanks for coming clean."

I can see federal agents summoning Rodriguez to testify under oath, wanting to know what Rodriguez knows. Who his dealers were. Which of his teammates used. Whether he was linked, in any way, to Barry Bonds or Roger Clemens.

I can see Jose Canseco, noted author and truth-teller, casting more aspersions on Rodriguez, mocking A-Rod's claim that he only juiced while a member of the Rangers from 2001 to 2003.

I can see a whole lot of people asking a whole lot of questions, because there's no way to know whether A-Rod told the truth to ESPN's Peter Gammons. He certainly didn't when CBS' Katie Couric asked him about steroid use.

Oh, A-Rod isn't going to be prosecuted. The federal investigators are after liars, not users. Rodriguez, as far as anyone knows, has not spoken under oath, unlike Bonds, Clemens and Miguel Tejada. The statute of limitations for his crime — and yes, it was a crime — expired after five years.

A-Rod also isn't going to be dragged before Congress. Our trusted lawmakers displayed dubious priorities when they called the initial steroid hearings in 2005, and wouldn't dare pull such a stunt again with the nation's economy in shambles.

But none of that means Rodriguez is in the clear.

What happens if the feds put him under oath? What if he fails to tell them the entire truth in an effort to protect his case for the Hall of Fame? What if he becomes the next Bonds or Clemens?

Rodriguez was a teammate of Clemens with the Yankees. He had a relationship with Bonds and for a time the two both used Scott Boras as their agent. Boras employs his own trainers and doctors. Maybe the feds will want to subpoena him, too.

Under oath, Rodriguez would face pressure to squeal on his friends and fellow players and become even more of a pariah. Awful as that sounds, it would sure beat the alternative — potential prison time for lying under oath.

Mark McGwire declined to speak to Congress in 2005 precisely because he feared being placed in such an uncomfortable position.

"My lawyers have advised me that I cannot answer these questions without jeopardizing my friends, my family and myself," McGwire said.

Rodriguez evidently believed the upside of trying to salvage his reputation was greater than the downside of any potential fallout from his ESPN interview.

Tainted stat?
Alex Rodriguez is close to becoming one of the top 10 home run hitters of all time, but Saturday's report may shed doubt on the legitimacy of his spot on this list:
Rank
Player
HRs
10
Rafael Palmeiro
569
11
Reggie Jackson
563
12
Alex Rodriguez
553
13
Mike Schmidt
548
See the complete top 25 list

Well, by "coming clean," he has compromised the other 103 players who tested positive in '03, putting pressure on them to be just as forthcoming if their identities are revealed.

But Rodriguez isn't worried about them, is he?

Sorry, Rodriguez will not escape like Andy Pettitte, who confirmed the Mitchell Report's allegation that he used human growth hormone in a tell-all news conference last spring.

Pettitte is well-liked. Rodriguez is widely regarded as insincere. Pettitte said he used HGH in 2002 and 2004 only to recover from injuries. Rodriguez said he used steroids because he felt pressure to succeed after signing his $252 million contract with the Rangers.

Which begs the question: How much pressure does he feel after signing his $275 million deal with the Yankees, who play under scrutiny that he never experienced in Texas?

Enough to cheat again?

This isn't over. Not even close.

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