Stealing these pictures from Time Magazine.Beau Holder said:Dies Irae said:Ag_07 said:
Speaking of steroids I watched the Untold episode on BALCO last night.
It's pretty good and at the time it was just background noise for me so it was interesting to hear the whole ordeal and learn the details.
We always knew guys were juicing and they were huge but seeing them compared to how guys look now and it's comical.
And Victor Conte and Barry Bonds are two of the biggest PsOS in sports history
Mark McGwire was one of the most laughable physique changes (along with Bonds) I've ever seen. He literally looked like a cartoon character.
Also, I love Baggy but you'll never convince me he didn't take the needle either
Creatine really works, folks!
Here's Bonds in 1992, his last year with the Pirates, when he was 27 - in that 27-31 prime we all talk about - and had been in the league for 7 years. He hit 34 homers that year, drove in 103, led the league in runs scored, walks, OBP and SLG and won MVP.
Here he is in 1996 with the Giants at age 31. Still pretty trim. He hit 42 home runs and drove in 129 that year while hitting .308, and led the league with 151 walks, but only finished 5th in the MVP voting as the juicing was starting all around him, combined with the Rockies having 15 guys hit .300 with 100 RBI every year.
Ken Caminiti won MVP.
Here he is in 2001 with the Giants at age 36 looking like Howard Stark and Dr. Abraham Erskine just gave him the super soldier serum. As alluded to in Game of Shadows, he was super pissed about all the attention that McGwire and Sosa got during the home run chases of 97-99 while he was a much more complete player than either. In 2001, he put up the ultimate cartoon numbers. 73 homers, 137 RBI, .328 average, 177 walks, .515 OBP, .863 slugging, 1.379 OPS. This started a run of four straight NL MVP awards for him, even in 2003 when he only played 130 games.