05-16-2009, 10:48 AM
<!--quoteo(post=38199:date=May 15 2009, 06:55 PM:name=Clapp)-->QUOTE (Clapp @ May 15 2009, 06:55 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}><!--quotec-->And on that topic, there's of course suspicion of Theriot now.
<!--quoteo--><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE <!--quotec-->Theriot said he laughed when he saw the headline: "Small hitter, big problem: When even Theriot raises suspicions, baseball's earned cynicism."
"It's just comical," Theriot said.
Cubs manager Lou Piniella was upset by what the headline and column implied.
"Isn't that crazy?" Piniella said. "When the wind is blowing out at Wrigley and you can show some bat speed and get the ball up in the pull field, you're going to get rewarded.
"The biggest problem with the steroid thing is not the fact that people took steroids, it's that the people who haven't get tainted along with everybody else," Piniella said. "This is why truthfully, when they named Alex [Rodriguez] it's unfair. They should've named all 103 [players who tested positive]. Look, if I were clean, I'd want to let people know I was clean so if I hit a few home runs, people don't look at me and say, 'Is this guy Popeye or what?'"
Theriot, whose previous high for homers in a season was three and who hit only one last season in 149 games, has belted five in the Cubs' first 33 games, including his first career grand slam.
"I guess everybody is entitled to their own opinion," Theriot said. "It's unfortunate that it's come to this. I guess you can write whatever you want to write and it's up to the readers to formulate their own opinion."<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
<!--quoteo-->QUOTE <!--quotec-->Theriot said he even stopped drinking protein shakes in 2005. Now he relies on an occasional ice cream drumstick.
"Coming up through high school and the time I was in college, supplements were a huge part of our workout regime," Theriot said. "Companies would sponsor your school, and you would get free supplements. For me, the risk-reward was never worth it, to even take a chance on a protein shake. My supplements the last four, five years have been Gatorade and water."
Piniella talked to Theriot in late April when the team was in St. Louis about trying to pull the ball more.
"The last time I checked, I was a professional athlete and an everyday player who has put up some decent numbers," Theriot said. "I guess anybody can do anything if you set your mind to it. I've always been under that belief. I feel I could go out there and pitch if I wanted to. A few homers here and there -- you have to remember it's only a few. It's not like I've got 30."
All of Theriot's 12 career home runs have come at Wrigley Field.
"I asked him in St. Louis earlier in the year to not think of right field exclusively -- drive the ball," Piniella said. "You're capable of driving the ball to left-center, right-center. I think it's absurd to think anything else.
"Truthfully, not anybody, but mostly anybody in the big leagues is capable of hitting 10 or 12 home runs," Piniella said.<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
<!--QuoteEnd--></div><!--QuoteEEnd-->
I wonder if either of them actually read Telander's article. It wasn't accusing Theriot of using. It was being ironic - the point was that now, when anyone does anything out of the ordinary power-wise, we are suspicious because of the culture MLB allowed to fester.
Theriot was just the vehicle. Telander no more thinks Theriot has juiced than we do.
<!--quoteo--><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE <!--quotec-->Theriot said he laughed when he saw the headline: "Small hitter, big problem: When even Theriot raises suspicions, baseball's earned cynicism."
"It's just comical," Theriot said.
Cubs manager Lou Piniella was upset by what the headline and column implied.
"Isn't that crazy?" Piniella said. "When the wind is blowing out at Wrigley and you can show some bat speed and get the ball up in the pull field, you're going to get rewarded.
"The biggest problem with the steroid thing is not the fact that people took steroids, it's that the people who haven't get tainted along with everybody else," Piniella said. "This is why truthfully, when they named Alex [Rodriguez] it's unfair. They should've named all 103 [players who tested positive]. Look, if I were clean, I'd want to let people know I was clean so if I hit a few home runs, people don't look at me and say, 'Is this guy Popeye or what?'"
Theriot, whose previous high for homers in a season was three and who hit only one last season in 149 games, has belted five in the Cubs' first 33 games, including his first career grand slam.
"I guess everybody is entitled to their own opinion," Theriot said. "It's unfortunate that it's come to this. I guess you can write whatever you want to write and it's up to the readers to formulate their own opinion."<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
<!--quoteo-->QUOTE <!--quotec-->Theriot said he even stopped drinking protein shakes in 2005. Now he relies on an occasional ice cream drumstick.
"Coming up through high school and the time I was in college, supplements were a huge part of our workout regime," Theriot said. "Companies would sponsor your school, and you would get free supplements. For me, the risk-reward was never worth it, to even take a chance on a protein shake. My supplements the last four, five years have been Gatorade and water."
Piniella talked to Theriot in late April when the team was in St. Louis about trying to pull the ball more.
"The last time I checked, I was a professional athlete and an everyday player who has put up some decent numbers," Theriot said. "I guess anybody can do anything if you set your mind to it. I've always been under that belief. I feel I could go out there and pitch if I wanted to. A few homers here and there -- you have to remember it's only a few. It's not like I've got 30."
All of Theriot's 12 career home runs have come at Wrigley Field.
"I asked him in St. Louis earlier in the year to not think of right field exclusively -- drive the ball," Piniella said. "You're capable of driving the ball to left-center, right-center. I think it's absurd to think anything else.
"Truthfully, not anybody, but mostly anybody in the big leagues is capable of hitting 10 or 12 home runs," Piniella said.<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
<!--QuoteEnd--></div><!--QuoteEEnd-->
I wonder if either of them actually read Telander's article. It wasn't accusing Theriot of using. It was being ironic - the point was that now, when anyone does anything out of the ordinary power-wise, we are suspicious because of the culture MLB allowed to fester.
Theriot was just the vehicle. Telander no more thinks Theriot has juiced than we do.
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