NFL has 14 players suspended to start season, but MLB has steroids!
One of the biggest double standards in all of sports is how the NFL gets a free pass when it comes to criticizing players for off-field problems, yet because baseball had the steroid era MLB players might as well be the devil reincarnate.
Fourteen players will start the 2010 NFL season suspended:
Ben Roethlisberger – wasn’t charged, but accused of sexual assault twice in one year
Cary Williams – domestic dispute
Quinn Ojinnaka – arrested and charged with battery, accused of throwing his wife down the stairs of their house and throwing her out
Aqib Talib – punched a cab driver, charged with resisting arrest without violence and simple battery
Jonathan Babineaux – substance abuse
Robert James – PEDs
Santonio Holmes – violated substance abuse policy
Shawn Nelson – failed drug test (supposedly marijuana)
LenDale White – failed drug test (supposedly marijuana)
Vincent Jackson – two DUIs
Leroy Hill – arrested on marijuana-possession charge
Johnny Jolly – felony drug charge
Brian Cushing – PEDs
Gerald McRath – PEDs
Let’s see, we’ve got battery, sexual assault, failed drug tests, PEDs and one punched cab driver. And yet somehow, Pacman Jones’ name didn’t make the list.
When an NFL player is suspended, one of the first things that fans ask is, “How long will he be out for?”
When a MLB player is caught using steroids, it’s: “He disrespected the game! Cut off his f**king hands! Prepare him for sacrifice to the baseball Gods!”
Mark McGwire tried to get a job earlier this year as the Cardinals’ hitting coach and you would have sworn that he set a school on fire that happened to be next to a church, which also burned down. Yet Santonio Holmes is being viewed as the ultimate late round sleeper in fantasy football drafts because he’s going to be out for the first four games for violating the league’s substance abuse policy.
Look, I realize that steroids can have a profound effect on scared records, wins and whether or not players have an unnatural advantage over another player.
But I’m sorry, steroids take a back seat to domestic violence, battery and sexual abuse. Wrong is wrong and cheating the game of baseball is definitely grounds for being scrutinized for the rest of your life but come on – NFL players are breaking the law and it’s not even Page 7B news anymore.
The double standard between how NFL and MLB players are viewed is appalling.
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