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i dont i hate him
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2007-06-22 12:26:09 · 13 answers · asked by Brandon G 1 in Sports Baseball

13 answers

its a cherished record Brandon, of course it should be a huge deal, imagine anyone hitting 750 plus, come on thats so enormous, also he has been MVP 7 times!!!!! BBonds is one of a kind stuck in this so called sterioid warp,, all BS. think of how many homers he would now have if he didnt walk so much the last 6 years! goodluck

2007-06-22 12:31:55 · answer #1 · answered by alangj91761 4 · 0 1

Barry Bonds will pass the HR record. However, his record will always be questioned whether or not if he juiced up to achieve it.

In my honest opinion, I will always question Bond's record and he won't be considered the true HR King. To me, Ruth is still the HR legend of baseball because he did it in fewer games than Hank Arron or Barry Bonds. Plus, the baseball that was used back then was not nearly as lively as the baseballs used during the past 30 years. Consequently, it took a stronger and better hitter to get out of the ball park during the glory days of professional baseball.

Yeah, I know, this one will get a lot of thumbs down because many won't agree.

2007-06-22 12:41:34 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I think so. It's going to raise more awareness about cheating in sports, drugs, gambling, domestic violence and weapons when athletes decide to do these things while in and out of uniform.

I think that any professional athlete that worked while the "steroid controversy" was in full force will be under the radar, if they are close to passing records and milestones. That little hint of "did he/she, or didn't he/she" will be on people's minds.

The people who support him plus people who hate him will make a big deal about it.

2007-06-22 13:47:09 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The irrational hatred and vitriol surrounding him and his performances have reduced what should have been a grand finale into a grand "finally".

Frankly I'll be glad when it's over and the haters will have to abandon their "he oughta break his leg / get killed by a fastball to his oversized head / I'd hate him slightly less if he retired at 754" verbal excrement. They won't shut up any, but they'll have a severely reduced set of hate-filled topics on which to foamily rant and blither.

2007-06-22 14:07:38 · answer #4 · answered by Chipmaker Authentic 7 · 0 0

Hate him or not, he's going to break it and it's a huge deal for baseball.....Not just because of how big of a record it is, but also how much scrutiny it's going to bring

2007-06-22 12:31:53 · answer #5 · answered by Bryan P 3 · 0 0

confident, because of fact he would be over-taking the main in call for baseball participant (and particular maximum in call for athlete) of all time in between the main in call for stats of all-time. 755 is staggering and the chief, yet 714 is unquestionably greater properly everyday. If this became into the different participant, MLB could be making a great deal out of it.

2016-11-07 05:59:10 · answer #6 · answered by lauramore 4 · 0 0

Of course it's a big deal...for MLB. Like him or not, he brings in the ratings. And that means money.

2007-06-22 12:35:41 · answer #7 · answered by Jon Skywalker 4 · 0 0

Not any more. There will always be asterisks and question-marks next to his statistics. It's a shame as he is/was a talented baseball player

2007-06-22 12:30:47 · answer #8 · answered by Ace Librarian 7 · 1 0

Its a big deal because we would have a guy who cheated his way to it.

2007-06-22 12:31:06 · answer #9 · answered by monte_x2 2 · 0 0

No, the whole thing is tainted by his beach ball sized head and steroids. It will be better when/if A-Rod breaks it.

2007-06-22 12:36:20 · answer #10 · answered by Bestie 6 · 0 0

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