Witch Hunt Research Paper

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Pages: 3

The Witch Hunt of The Steroid Era
Ever since 1869 when the MLB was founded, there have hundreds of great players to come up and through the Major League Baseball system. From the Babe Ruth to Ted Williams to Cal Ripken to Derek Jeter to Aaron Judge there have been many dominant players. But that doesn’t necessarily mean that they are all cheaters or drug users. Just because you are good at something doesn’t mean that you are a cheater. Although some successful baseball players have been steroid users, it doesn’t mean that every good player should be accused of cheating.
Dusty Baker’s quote saying “[The Steroid Era] is like McCarthyism” perfectly describes this time period. It was a literal witch hunt in the baseball world. Jason Giambi’s words “Steroids don’t
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Him, along with multiple other MLB players got suspended for using PEDs. The former star admitted to taking steroids from 2010-2012 and spending over 12,000 dollars a month on hormones that were injected into his stomach. Reports have even said that his supplier drew blood from him in the bathroom of a Miami nightclub (Normandin). Rodriguez was eventually caught and served a full season (162 game) suspension. Now if the two HOFer caliber statistics are compared, they come out to be fairly even. With Rodriguez playing three more years than Ortiz, he does have a stunning 696 homeruns compared to Ortiz’s 541. ARod also has a higher batting average and totals over 2,000 RBI’s while Ortiz has 1768 (David Ortiz Baseball Reference). However, the knock on Rodriguez is that he only won one World Series while Ortiz won three (Alex Rodriguez Baseball Reference). With all of this, it can be concluded that the steroid era was like the witch hunt in Arthur Miller’s The Crucible. Players were criticized for just being good baseball players. Just because someone is good at something doesn’t mean that they are cheating. This applies to everything in life, not just