Barry Bonds is probably the most unwanted man in the Giants team, he is liked by none. Neither the managers nor his teammates want him in the team. Bud Selig’s worst confirmed phantasm is entering its fourth season: a man with acquaintances to federal steroid investigation, who faces the odds of condemnation, is a renowned name in the baseball and is just 22 home runs away to break one of the game’s most esteemed records.
No One Else Like Barry Bonds
The more Selig talks about this “Golden Age of Baseball”, and as commendable as Major League players like Albert Pujols, David Ortiz and Ryan Howard have been, Selig knows that Bonds, since he has been one of the unsurpassed face and has had Babe Ruth and Hank Aaron in his home run crosshairs, is an undesirable diversion who stipulates consideration.
After facing so much criticism, Bonds is swimming against the tide with more confidence. Bonds can still hit. And when a player as great as Bonds preserves his fire to play, we cannot say him off on age alone. Bonds is going to break the one of the venerated records in home runs, three cheers for him.
Hip Hip Hurrah… Hip Hip Hurrah… Hip Hip Hurrah!