(The following is being syndicated from The Captain’s Blog).

Did Ryan Braun drop the ball by testing positive for PEDs?

If Albert Pujols’ decision to head west was a time bomb, Ryan Braun’s positive test for performance enhancing drugs was an atomic blast. Already facing the loss of Prince Fielder to free agency, the Brewers must now go forward with Braun’s pending 50-game suspension hanging over the team. In many ways, this has been a nuclear winter in Milwaukee.

Braun has not disputed the report about his positive test, but he has vehemently questioned its validity, blunting telling USA Today “it’s BS”. Since being informed of the result last month, Braun has taken several steps to establish his innocence, including having another sample tested. Although the right fielder’s representative has expressed confidence regarding exoneration, the appeals process places a heavy burden of proof on the player, so even with compelling evidence, Braun is facing an uphill battle.

There are highly unusual circumstances surrounding this case which will support Ryan’s complete innocence and demonstrate there was absolutely no intentional violation of the program.” - spokesman for Ryan Braun, quoted by ESPN, December 10, 2011

If Braun wins his appeal, he’d become the first player to have a positive test overturned. However, that doesn’t necessarily mean he’ll be able to restore his reputation. Judging by the initial reaction, which has already been highly presumptuous of his guilt, Braun will likely have to deal with some level of taint for the rest of his career, which makes the story being leaked even more punitive than the potential suspension. In fact, the presumption of guilt has been so strong, some have even argued that Braun shouldn’t even bother protesting his innocence.

Regardless of Braun’s level of guilt, the fact that the positive test was revealed prior to completion of the appeal process is part of the story that should not be ignored. Whether the leak came from inside the commissioner’s office or the World Anti-Doping Agency lab that confirmed the result, the violation of privacy is unacceptable. After years of neglect, baseball has implemented one of the most effective drug testing programs in U.S. sports, but if breaches of confidence continue to occur, Selig could lose the cooperation he has enjoyed from the MLBPA.

If it turns out that Braun violated baseball’s drug policy, and did so either willingly or because of negligence, he will be deserving of whatever scorn public sentiment heaps upon him. Unlike the big name sluggers implicated in the past, players testing positive today cannot use the excuse that everyone was doing it, nor can they hide behind the league’s tacit approval. A positive test now is not only a willful attempt to cheat, but a blatant disregard for the best interests of the sport. However, until the appeals process has run its course, Braun deserves the benefit of the doubt. Just because baseball was slow to address the problem of performance enhancing drugs in the past doesn’t mean we need to rush to judgment now. Unfortunately, baseball’s inability to protect the privacy of the process has made that easier said than done.

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4 Responses to Braun Deserves Benefit of the Doubt, but Leak Gives Black Eye to All

  1. Zack D says:

    I gave him the benefit of the doubt until I read this quote from his attorney via Rotoworld: “Any report that Ryan ingested a performance-enhancing drug is wrong”

    Why did his lawyer pick the word “ingest”? He didn’t ingest..what about inject? absorb? etc. Sorry, high profile lawyer who’s defended “Reggie Bush, Randy Moss and Gilbert Arenas” is way to smart for that to be a simple “slip of the tongue”

  2. Domenic says:

    If Braun wins his appeal, he’d become the first player to have a positive test overturned.

    There are rumblings from folk like Keith Law and Kevin Goldstein (among others) that there are likely players that have won such a challenge … we simply haven’t heard about it, as MLB tries its damnedest to keep such positives undisclosed until a player has a chance to respond. I don’t know if that’s just speculation on their part, but it seems to be a fairly common sentiment right now.

    Things don’t look too good for Braun, as it stands. Beyond the narrative his camp is trying to craft, the only real evidence of his ‘innocence’ is a second test conducted by his people on a different sample at an undisclosed time … really, Ryan?

    • nyyankeefanforever says:

      Certain tests in the past have been successfully challenged due to inconsistent standards and been kept sealed. But that isn’t “overturning” a test result. The only groundbreaking here is that Braun is attempting to become the first MLB player to successfully challenge a suspension for juicing — not the test result itself.

      Interestingly, Brendan Katins, a minor leaguer with the Hunstville Stars in the Brewers system and former UM teammate of Braun’s, is the only player at any level to ever successfully challenge such a suspension, but his case was a matter of a premature notification and not a false positive, and is inapplicable in this case because the testing procedure was more stringent and approved by the union and MLB.

      Another interesting note; Braun is the fourth MVP snagged for juicing that played for the Hunstville Stars. (Giambi, Canseco and Tejada are the other three.) Mark McGwire also played for the Stars.

      Benefit of the doubt is one thing, but at some point, coincidence simply stretches credulity.

  3. MJ Recanati says:

    “[T]he violation of privacy is unacceptable. After years of neglect, baseball has implemented one of the most effective drug testing programs in U.S. sports, but if breaches of confidence continue to occur, Selig could lose the cooperation he has enjoyed from the MLBPA.”

    I agree, and I’d take it a step further: the fact that leaks continue to spring — and player privacy is so clearly disregarded — I agree with Marvin Miller’s position that players should never give an inch on the PED testing front until owners and testing labs are properly incentivized to uphold player privacy rights.

    As much as we might enjoy salacious stories, it’s nevertheless disgusting that guys like Braun (and A-Rod, and even the loathsome Manny) get their names dragged through the mud like this.

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