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    Big League Stew

    Ryan Braun: ‘The truth is on my side’

    Ryan Braun said the drug-testing process, and information leaks about it, are unfair. (AP)Ryan Braun stood alone at a microphone at Milwaukee Brewers spring training camp in Arizona and told Major League Baseball — in defiant but polite terms — what it could do with its drug testing program.

    Calling the process "fatally flawed" and having characteristics "opposite of the American judicial system," Braun breathed a public sigh of relief, not only because he won't be suspended for 50 games for testing positive for elevated testosterone, but also because his reputation, he believes, has been restored.

    [Jeff Passan: Braun ruling deals blow to MLB testing ]

    "We won because the truth is on my side," Braun said as teammates listened from the stands at the Brewers facility in Phoenix.

    The truth is, Braun won because he had the very best legal advice possible, and there's nothing wrong with that — if you can afford it. Per the Associated Press:

    Braun detailed how the urine sample he provided on Oct. 1, the day the Brewers opened the playoffs, was not delivered to Federal Express until Oct. 3. Baseball's drug agreement calls for samples to be delivered to FedEx on the same day they are collected.

    And so, on Thursday night, the arbitrator with a Jedi's name —  Shyam Das — ruled in Braun's favor. It's the first time an appeal of this nature at the major-league level has been sustained. And it's pretty simple as to why. No mind tricks were necessary. Perhaps Braun's legal team could have fought the suspension in other ways, but they didn't need to. Braun had MLB dead to rights on the rules.

    No matter what the sample collector did with Braun's urine — even if he kept it safe in a special urine-only refrigerator with deadbolt locks and a pee guard dog — it doesn't matter. The rules say he had to express the sample to the testing facility on the same day, and he didn't.

    [Y! Sports Radio: Jeff Passan says Ryan Braun still has much to prove]

    MLB is said to be furious with the ruling — worrying that it puts its entire drug testing program at risk — and is looking into a lawsuit to get Das' ruling set aside or overturned. But if the 48-hour lag time "doesn't matter," then why is it in the agreement that samples must be rushed to the testers in Montreal? Based on its track record in court when it comes to arbitrators rulings, MLB is bound to lose this fight. They might want to, instead, read this part of Braun's statement:

    "We're part of a process where you're 100 percent guilty until proven innocent — it's the opposite of the American judicial system. If we're held to that standard, it's only fair that everybody else is held to that exact same standard.

    "With what's at stake — this is my livelihood, this is my integrity, this is my character — this is everything in my life being called into question. We need to make sure that we get it right. If you're going to be in a position where you're 100 percent guilty until proven innocent, you can't mess up. And today is about making sure that this doesn't happen to anybody else who has played this game."

    Amen. Two or three mens, in fact. Braun also pointed his finger at news media to whom sources inside MLB leaked information that turned public what was supposed to be confidential and private matter.

    "Despite the fact there have been many inaccurate, erroneous and completely fabricated stories regarding this issue, I've maintained the confidentiality of this process," Braun said. "There's never been a 'personal medical issue,' I've never had an STD [and] many of the original stories reported by the original network have continued to live on and it's sad that people continue to leak information that's inaccurate."

    This part is not up to ESPN to fix. MLB needs to tighten its security, and its own lips, or else this will happen again.

    Braun might or might not be innocent. But being not guilty is all he needs to play, and there's no good reason to not enjoy him do so. Unless you're a Cubs fan. Here's Braun's statement in its entirety:

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    • Mike B  •  Tucson, Arizona  •  2 months ago
      How does time alter the urine to make it show positive for a banned substance? Or is the claim that it was tampered with? Too many conflicting statements and issues on both sides. But I still wonder how the positive result was generated.
      • Devere 2 months ago
        It may have been random. Testing is not an exact science.
      • Isaku900 2 months ago
        the positive result was generated from having exogenous testosterone metabolites express themselves in Ryan Braun's urine.

        If the MLB had taken the WADA code and dropped the MLB's name in the title there wouldn't have been an issue with the chain of custody as the DCO followed procedure under WADA perfectly. The ONLY issue was that the MLB wrote a very long but ultimately flawed drug policy due to the requirements in the policy to express ship the sample the same day.
      • History Avenger 2 months ago
        Even the idiot Tim Brown says that he must have been bathing in tetosterone - another sign there was a problem with the sample.
    • CC  •  Baltimore, Maryland  •  2 months ago
      Just as OJ Simpson looks for Nicole's murderer, Ryan Braun will search for the person whose urine that actually was. Truth, justice and the American way, right Ryan?
      • Alex 2 months ago
        OJ searched every golf course in Florida I heard. Wonder where Braun will start?
    • BushW  •  Brampton, Canada  •  2 months ago
      I say if he plays opening day for the Brewers we boycott all Brewer games and their merchandising....30:1 doesn't happen by accident or because his sample sat an extra day or so in the fridge....what a joke! When Braun turns 50 and his body starts breaking down, he'll look back on his PED use and regret it...
      • KyleB 2 months ago
        a 30:1 ratio would kill a man, that is enough evidence to me that the sample was tampered with...
      • DC 2 months ago
        You don't know what you're talking about Kyle. They're had samples that test at 80:1 with the person still living. They screwed up and he got off. Fine. Don't tell me he wasn't taking anything though.
      • Bushwacker 2 months ago
        Braun cheated...end of story.
    • JOEY  •  Livonia, Michigan  •  2 months ago
      You would think with all the problems of PED'S in baseball they would have a mobile lab do the testing on site. with all the technology available today, they still are depending on a courier service and everyday people to handle the samples before they get to the labs!!
      • mikey 2 months ago
        Good point......test it right there, right away. Montreal?
    • Pete in VA  •  Richmond, Virginia  •  2 months ago
      Braun was NOT vindicated, he got off on a technicality.
      • CC 2 months ago
        Clearly. I agree.
    • kmat  •  Sunbury, Pennsylvania  •  2 months ago
      hows it feel to be hated braun you pos...
    • B-Nu  •  Kent, Ohio  •  2 months ago
      What happens when he bats .280 with 22 hr's and 80 rbi's?

      What happens when he bats .350, with 43 hr's and 130 RBI's?

      Either way people will say he was using.
    • Tom  •  2 months ago
      How about administering drug tests on weekdays and not over the weekend when FedEx is closed?
    • Mama_Mia  •  2 months ago
      I think we should all reserve judgment until we know the definition of the word "is" when he makes the statement "the truth is on my side".
    • emerson622000  •  Akron, Ohio  •  2 months ago
      He should get on his knees and thank God for the idiot who mishandled his sample (You don't know if FedEx is open,and you don't look in the phone book or internet for locations and then call around???) and helped him to win his case O.J. style.(If the #$%$ in in the fridge,you must acquit!)
    • All Intelligent Republica ...  •  2 months ago
      Braun = OJ (legal technicallity) Braun helping OJ seach for Nicoles killers
      Braun MVP = Most Valued PED legal team!
    • All Intelligent Republica ...  •  2 months ago
      Braun = OJ
      MVP = Most Clever PED user
    • John  •  Romeoville, Illinois  •  2 months ago
      Ryan Braun, the truth the the fan who isn't getting snowed by your sales pitch is that your urine, same seal intact at time of testing, had high levels of enhancing drugs in it. Agree the delivery was a day late, but who are you crapping.
    • Jim  •  Fayetteville, North Carolina  •  2 months ago
      Baseball is a billion dollar a year industry. How expensive would it really be to test every player in the league every 3 weeks. This way they could never "CYCLE" as they call doing steroids or HGH. For him to say he is not guilty because of a technicality is like me saying I'm not guilty of farting becasue someone sisnt hear me do it. Both reasons STINK
    • Ricardo  •  New York, New York  •  2 months ago
      He's dirty.
      So that fact that he's jewish had nothing to do with this wash-up? C'mon, now, who they kidding?
      The media was so quiet regarding braun when it was announced he came dirty. Nothing like when blacks and hispanic players come up positive. Now why was that? Race was clearly a factor in his decision reversal. Either that or lots of cash changed hands.
    • Matt  •  Milwaukee, Wisconsin  •  2 months ago
      I'm not quite sure why everybody is bashing the fact that he got off on a technicality. First of all, it was the only logical way in which he could win the appeal. Obviously, nobody has ever won the appeal by arguing against the results of the test. He simply used the only argument that would win.

      Second of all, why were the samples not taken in to FedEx immediately. It was said that the person who took the sample lives in Kenosha, WI. Anybody from Wisconsin knows that anywhere south of Racine is Cubs territory (Kenosha being on the Illinois border). Just saying. Also, there was no reason that the samples could not be dropped off at FedEx that night. There is simply no excuse. Again, anybody familiar with the Milwaukee area knows that in order to go home to Kenosha from Miller Park you will probably take I-94 south because it will be a rather short ride home to Kenosha. Taking streets would be much, much longer to reach Kenosha. Where am I going with this? It just so happens that at the airport there is a FedEx open 24/7. What does a person going to Kenosha on I-94 pass? That's right, the airport (only a few hundred feet from the highway). There's a reason why the sample taker didn't drop the urine samples at FedEx...
    • northern lights  •  2 months ago
      Congress has been waiting for the next shoe to drop in baseball's PED drama. Ruling on Braun incident is proof the system failed. Reminds me of the Mitchell Report...not a single Red Sox mentioned as being connected to PED's. Yes, everyone knows the connection between Mitchell and Red Sox, soon thereafter, several Boston players PED use came to light.
    • keith  •  Liverpool, United Kingdom  •  2 months ago
      Ryan frog spawn will win the lottery every week this year,that is how lucky that cheater is.
    • triodesrbetter  •  2 months ago
      There's obviously more to what's been reported. Das, who's been with MLB for a decade, wouldn't just say "well, you kept it for a day too long so he's free to go."

      Having just been on a trial for two months, considering evidence - both direct and circumstancial - is an extrememly tedious process. Arbitrators, like judges, have set of guidelines to follow in making their decision.

      Although saying "he got off due to a technicality" seems to be the popular, simplistic way to bring about closure, I think it would be too early and too naive to say it's the truth.

      Once Das' report is out, then I'll judge whether he's a load of ***** or not.
    • Erich  •  Cleveland, Ohio  •  2 months ago
      MLB had a chance to make an example of Ryan Braun and move beyond the steroid era into the identity theft era of Leo Nunez and Fausto Carmona. Now kids everywhere know that cheating is OK as long as you win the MVP

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