Look here Ma, that durn POKO has started up a blog on this here internet thingamabob.
BillyBob, have you done finished milking the cows? You know reading that tripe POKO writes wont get the chores done!
Okay Ma, I'll do my chores now and read the blog after I feed the pigs. That durn POKO, he's always up to something...
It's More Than A Blog - no need to add water and stir, just take it straight up
Came to life: on December 31, 2004 23:59 PM
Not a journalist, but highly opinionated
BlogMmmmmyasssss is more than just a blog - BlogMmmmmyasssss is full of yummy stuff.
BLOGmmmmmyasssss
Major League Baseball Gets Another Black Eye "Let me start by telling you this: I have never used steroids, period. I do not know how to say it any more clearly than that -- never. The reference to me in Mr. Canseco's book is absolutely false. I am against the use of steroids."
Baseball has had its share of bad publicity over the years.
March 2005, Rafael Palmeiro seen opposite, testifies that he doesn't use steroids.
August 2005 - Palmeiro is suspended for steroid use.
Just a few other examples:
Several years ago,
Pete Rose, was found to have been gambling on ballgames. Rose will never see his name in Baseball's Hall of Fame. A shame because Pete Rose was a hall of famer class ballplayer who gave 200% in each of his twenty-four years in baseball. His hard working style prompted Hall of Fame Yankee pitcher Whitey Ford to label him "Charlie Hustle," a nickname that Rose would be known by for the rest of his career.
The Black Sox scandal of 1919
started out as a few gamblers trying to get rich, and turned into one of the biggest, and easily the darkest, event in baseball history. It was another jolt to a nation already in turmoil and made the American people lose faith in the game they loved. The players and conspirators are long dead, but the controvery rages on. How much did everyone know? How big a part did people play? Who did what? And lastly, should "Shoeless" Joe, the Chicago White Sox leftfielder, be admitted to the Hall of Fame, an honor he otherwise earned?
Major League ballplayers
went out on strike
in 1994 and stayed out 234 days. Many fans stopped watching baseball after that strike, including this webmaster.
And from
TSN comes this story that Barry Bonds will not return to baseball until next season.
Methinks he's taking time to drain all evidence of steroids from his body.
Baseball sure has its problems lately - Babe Ruth must be rolling in his grave.
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