Honor?
Isn't that what this is really all about? Is it more honorable to be the highest paid, regardless of cost to your own health, image of the game, impact on your team? Or is it more honorable to achieve the most you can, by working hard and using what you are born with?
Where is the pride in finding the best chemical enhancers, stealing signs, shaving points? Maybe it is there, in the records set, the awards given, the prices paid for tickets, but, is it the same kind of pride that is derived from working hard, giving it the best with what you've got, and, looking back on your life, knowing that whatever you achieved was YOURS and not some chemical's? Aren't the records, games, careers, without the asterisk just a little more meaningful?
Why have talent when you can lip sync, digitally alter, cheat in any number of ways?
Don't get me wrong, I have no problem with better living through chemicals, mixing and editing music and videos, stars and models having plastic surgery. For the most part for most things in my life, especially those that impact me, or my family directly, I would, however, like adequate labeling. If that apple is going to be genetically altered and treated with chemicals so that it is blemish free, redder, and bigger than it would have been if it were unaltered, just let me know. Does the alteration make it less beautiful, less tasty, fresh longer? I'm not sure it matters, as long as I know. What is valuable to you you may not be valuable to me. If I am selling my "organic" apples, I don't want to compete against your altered apples that you are marketing as "organic". They really are not the same product. Apples and Apples*
If professional sports really is just entertainment, that's fine. Let's just all agree on that. WWF is, in my mind, just entertainment. Granted, it is physically demanding, highly skilled entertainment, but entertainment, non the less. Should there be a warning that comes with all professional sports: "Do not try this at home..."?
But even entertainers are not exempt from the ravages of steroids or other drugs. Should we turn a blind eye because they are merely entertainers? Granted, Brittney, Amy Whinehouse, Paris, Sutherland, are just entertainers, but they are hurting themselves, driving cars under the influence, raising children.... Their behavior is not only self destructive, it takes its toll on society in general.
The day the Mitchell report was released, the local news in the DC metro area interviewed a high school senior baseball player from our community. It was pretty common knowledge that his brother had killed himself. What wasn't common knowledge was that the brother was taking steroids. In the interview, the baseball player attributed the death of his brother directly to the effects of steroids. Do you think that no one other than the one taking the steroids was hurt?
I don't think the Mitchell report was all that damaging to baseball. There may be a lot of discussion about the use of steroids, but it is also pulling back the curtain and showing us all what lies behind that image. It has provided great discussion points in our family about not equating professional success (in any walk of life) with ethics, fairness, moral value, or hard work. Success on the field does not necessarily equate with success of character. Failure of character does not necessarily diminish success on the field, so long as the failure of character is not brought unfairly into play on the field.
You can discuss legalities, criminal and civil, as long as you want. For me, and for our family, it is all about honor, honesty, and pride. For us, it is about how we define success, and our responsibility to ourselves and to those around us. These players may be existing in the rarified air of professional sports, but they do not live and play in a vacuum. Their actions have greater impact than what they personally experience. There is nothing wrong with holding them accountable for the consequences of their actions.