Roger Clemens has always had a reputation among sportswriters for playing fast and loose with the truth. Will McDonough,
the late and legendary Boston Globe sports columnist, called him the
"Texas con man" long before Clemens' integrity was called into question
on something as major as his alleged use of performance-enhancing
drugs. Still, what Clemens said was never exactly what you got, or at
the very least was open to question.
When he was in Boston, he took a lot of flak, for example, after
being heard complaining about having to carry his own bags, but he
later denied ever saying that. Then there was the more
important question of why he left the 6th game of the 1986 World Series
after seven innings--with the Red Sox ahead of the New York Mets 3-2
(as well as 3 to 2 in games) and on the cusp of their first
championship in 68 years. The bullpen collapsed, setting the stage for Bill Buckner's infamous gaffe and a Mets World Series triumph. Red Sox manager John McNamara would later insist that Clemens had asked out with a blister, though Clemens denied it.
When he departed the Red Sox as a free agent, he said his major
motivation was being closer to his family in Texas, then signed the
biggest money offer--which happened to come from one of the few teams,
Toronto, that was further away from Texas than Boston. Two seasons
later, he forced his way out of Toronto and on to the Yankees. When he
retired from the Yankees, he took the car and the gifts in a moving
ceremony--and of course soon unretired to play with Houston, the first
of his three non-retirements.
And now we're asked to believe his version of very important events, as offered to Mike Wallace on "60 Minutes" last
night. Clemens had the home-field advantage not to mention an
interviewer with whom he had a friendly relationship and who, at 89,
can no longer bring it or mix up his pitches very effectively. Still,
Clemens was not at all convincing. In fact, he came across more as
someone aggrieved that his standout career didn't entitle him to the
benefit of the doubt from everybody than as a man who could effectively
rebut the allegations made by his former trainer, Brian McNamee.
Even though Wallace didn't follow up with the toughest questions,
those question were in the air and Clemens didn't really take a swing
at them. He didn't explain why, in his initial videotaped statement
denying the allegations in the Mitchell Report, he didn't mention those
legal injections given him by McNamee that were now at the core of his
defense. He didn't explain the medical efficacy of the
purported injections of the painkiller lidocaine and the vitamin B-12,
which medical experts have questioned. He didn't explain why McNamee
would lie about him, except to suggest it was "to stay out of prison",
though it appears to be quite the opposite--that McNamee is in jeopardy
of going to jail only if he didn't tell the truth. Finally, he had no
coherent response to why his close friend and training partner, Andy Pettitte would acknowledge
the truth of McNamee's allegation that Pettitte used HGH except to say
they are two separate cases though they are anything but that.
I certainly understand Clemens' distress. Overnight, courtesy of the Mitchell Report,
he went from being a revered American icon to the mound counterpart to
slugger Barry Bonds. Yet with all that is at stake, he never even took
the offensive and denounced McNamee a liar. We are left to wonder if
that is because McNamee's lawyer threatened a defamation of character lawsuit (UPDATE: Clemens beat him to the punch, filing a defamation suit against McNamee today) and that Clemens could never make that charge stick under oath. And, of course, with Pettite and others under oath too.
Clemens seems to think the public owes him because he was the
greatest pitcher of the modern era when how he became the greatest
pitcher of the modern era is exactly what is in question now. And his
whiff on "60 Minutes" portends an even bumpier time of it for Rocket
Roger next week when he is expected to appear--under oath--before a Congressional committee.