Tag Archives: Roger Clemens

Astros Watched Clemens' Workout

Earlier today, Roger Clemens signed a contract to pitch for the independent Sugar Land Skeeters. Clemens had a full workout today, during which he hit 87 mph on the radar gun despite now being 50 years of age. The Skeeters weren’t the only team in attendance, however. The Houston Chronicle’s Zachary Levine reports that Astros scouting director Mike Elias was on-hand for The Rocket’s workout as well (Twitter link). Levine and his colleagues David Barron and Jose de Jesus Ortiz offer the following quote from Astros owner Jim Crane:

“We don’t have any plans, we haven’t had any requests. We’d like to check and see where (Major League Baseball) is on the subject matter before we would do anything.”

Ken Rosenthal of FOX Sports adds, also via Twitter, that former Astros president and current Skeeters executive Tal Smith wouldn’t put an attempted Major League comeback past Clemens. In this video piece for FOX Sports, Rosenthal notes that a 2012 return to the Major Leagues would reset Clemens’ Hall of Fame clock. As it is, Clemens is eligible for the ballot following this season; pitching in 2012 would delay that eligibility for another five years.

Clemens coming out of retirement to pitch for the Sugar Land Skeeters


Roger Clemens it out of court and back on the baseball field.

Two months after he was found not guilty to six couts of perjury, making false statements and obstruction of Congress for denying that he took steroids, Clemens is set to join the Sugar Land Skeeters, according to Mark Berman of My Fox Houston.

“He’s in such great shape it’s ridiculous,” Astros bullpen catcher Javier Bracamonte, who caught Clemens’ bullpen for the Skeeters, said. “He’s the same guy he was before.

“He is nasty. His split is good. He still has life. He was throwing in the high 80s.”

“He ran three miles, threw a bullpen and threw batting practice,” Bracamonte said. “He had a lot of movement on the ball. To me he is still the same.”

It turns out the move may just be for fun though. Clemens’ agent told Jerry Crasnick of ESPN that they are going to see how it goes on Saturday before deciding if he will pitch for them again.

A return to the majors seems highly unlikely though as Clemens is 50-years-old, even older than the ancient Jamie Moyer. It has also been five years now since he last pitched at that level. Still, it might be kind of cool to watch The Rocket pitch one more time. Hopefully ESPN televises the game nationally.


Sugar Land Skeeters To Sign Roger Clemens

The independent Sugar Land Skeeters have agreed to sign seven-time Cy Young Award winner Roger Clemens, Mark Berman of FOX 26 in Houston reports. The Skeeters are based out of the Houston area, where Clemens pitched at the MLB level from 2004-06. The 50-year-old Texas native last pitched in the Major Leagues five years ago with the 2007 Yankees. 

Clemens had a full workout today and reached 87 mph on the radar gun, Berman reports. Clemens will start Saturday’s game, according to Berman. Earlier this summer, Clemens was acquitted on all charges that he obstructed justice and lied to Congress. Clemens was subject to a federal investigation after telling Congress he never used steroids or human growth hormone.

Former MLB All-Star Gary Gaetti manages the Skeeters, and former MLB players Scott Kazmir, Jason Lane and Tim Redding have appeared for the team this year.

Prosecutors say Clemens should face second trial

WASHINGTON (AP) — Prosecutors in the Roger Clemens perjury case said Friday they had made an honest mistake in showing jurors inadmissible evidence and that shouldn’t save the baseball star from facing a new trial.

The prosecutors filed arguments disputing Clemens’ position that a second trial would violate his constitutional protection against double jeopardy by making him face the same charges twice.

Clemens had argued the showing of the evidence was a deliberate ploy to invoke a mistrial because the prosecutors’ case was going badly. But the prosecutors say their case remains strong and Clemens wants to “gain an unwarranted windfall from this inadvertent error.”

The prosecutors said it was an oversight when they showed jurors a video clip that mentioned that Clemens’ teammate told his wife that Clemens admitted using performance-enhancing drugs – evidence the judge had ruled inadmissible. The filing is the prosecutors’ first public admission of wrongdoing in the case and first explanation of what went wrong.

The prosecutors wrote it was their duty to make sure that evidence was not included in their exhibits. “The government accepts responsibility for its oversight, and regrets the burdens that error has placed on this court and defendant,” they wrote, but argued the mistake was due to the press of other trial matters and was not intentional.

That’s an important point for the prosecutors to make to the judge, who has scheduled a Sept. 2 hearing on the retrial debate. Normally, when a defendant requests a mistrial, a second trial is not considered double jeopardy. The exception would be when the judge finds prosecutors intentionally provoked a mistrial.

But the prosecutors pointed out the sudden ending to Clemens’ trial came only on the second day of evidence in what was supposed to be a four- to six-week case. It came before prosecutors called crucial witnesses such as Brian McNamee, the pitcher’s longtime trainer, who said he injected Clemens with steroids and human growth hormone, or showed their key physical evidence – needles that McNamee said he used to inject Clemens and which the prosecutors said contained Clemens’ DNA and traces of the drugs. The defense planned to dispute both vigorously, arguing that McNamee is a habitual liar who fabricated the evidence to blackmail his former boss. But jurors only had hints of that dispute in opening arguments and had seen no evidence of it yet.

“It is impossible to credibly assert that the government had a motive for derailing defendant’s prosecution because it believed the case was going badly when the case was barely going,” the prosecutors said.

Clemens has steadfastly denied using performance-enhancing drugs during a standout 24-season career in which he broke multiple records pitching for the Boston Red Sox, Toronto Blue Jays, New York Yankees and Houston Astros. Clemens was the most prominent player accused of using drugs in a December 2007 investigative report to Major League Baseball led by former Sen. George Mitchell. Clemens went before a House committee in February 2008 to fight the allegations. He is charged with lying under oath by telling lawmakers he never used the drugs.

The quick end to his trial came when prosecutors were showing jurors a video of Clemens’ testimony. In the video, Rep. Elijah Cummings, D-Md., was questioning Clemens and pointed out that his good friend and teammate Andy Pettitte says Clemens admitted using human growth hormone in a private conversation in 1999 or 2000. Clemens responded that Pettitte “misheard” or “misremembered” their conversation. But Cummings said Pettitte’s wife, Laura, has given lawmakers an affidavit saying that her husband told her about the conversation with Clemens at the time it happened.

U.S. District Judge Reggie Walton had ruled the day before the trial began that Laura Pettitte’s comments were inadmissible hearsay because she didn’t speak to Clemens directly. When prosecutors aired the video, Walton sent jurors out of the courtroom and scolded the government attorneys for a move that a “first-year law student” would have known to avoid. Clemens attorney asked for a mistrial and Walton granted the motion, saying Clemens couldn’t get a fair trial with a jury that had seen the video.

Prosecutors pointed out that Walton’s ruling on Laura Pettitte’s statement came long after their exhibits had been prepared and as they were busy preparing for the trial’s imminent start. The prosecutors said while they should have redacted their exhibits to comply with Walton’s ruling, they were preoccupied with jury selection, opening statements and other trial matters.

“Unfortunately, neither government counsel additionally focused on whether the substance of Laura Pettitte’s testimony might be embedded in a question of one of defendant’s congressional interlocutors,” said the filing. The prosecutors said the reference to Laura Pettitte “would have been removed had government counsel adequately focused on it.”

Friday’s filing was signed by assistant U.S. attorneys Steven Durham and Daniel Butler, the two prosecutors who conducted the trial, along with their boss, U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia Ronald Machen Jr. and a colleague from the office’s appellate division. That suggests there has been no change in the prosecution team despite the error.

The U.S. attorney’s office declined to answer any questions, noting that Walton has issued a gag order preventing parties from commenting.

In San Francisco, prosecutors have not yet said whether they will attempt to retry home run king Barry Bonds. A mistrial was declared in April after a jury deadlocked on three counts charging Bonds with lying to a grand jury in 2003 when he denied using performance-enhancing drugs and said he allowed only doctors to inject him. Bonds was convicted of one count of obstruction of justice for giving the grand jury an evasive answer, and a hearing is scheduled for Thursday on Bonds’ attempt to set side that conviction.

© 2011 The Associated Press

Judge declares mistrial in Roger Clemens case

The judge declared a mistrial Thursday in baseball star Roger Clemens’ perjury trial after prosecutors showed jurors evidence that the judge had ruled out of bounds.

U.S. District Judge Reggie Walton said Clemens could not be assured a fair trial after prosecutors showed jurors evidence against his orders in the second day of testimony.

Read more at Boston Herald

Today In Sports History: July 5, 2011

1904 – Giants 18-game winning streak ends as Phillies win 6-5 in 10 inn

1914 – Boston Braves are 15 games back in NL, & win World Series

1935 – Chicago Cubs are 10½ games back in NL, & go on to win the pennant

1937 – Joe DiMaggio’s 1st grand slammer

1947 – Larry Doby pinch hit for the Cleveland Indians against the Chicago White Sox. The event made him the first black player to play in the American League.

1975 – Arthur Ashe became the first African-American man to win a Wimbledon singles title when he defeated Jimmy Connors in four sets.

1997 – Martina Hingis, at age 16, became the youngest Wimbledon winner in 110 years when she beat Jana Novotna in the women’s final.

1998 – Roger Clemens (Toronto Blue Jays) got his 3,000th career strikeout

Today In Sports History: July 2, 2011

1902 – John J McGraw becomes manager of NY Giants (stays for 30 years)

1903 – Pitcher Jack Doscher, 1st son of a major leaguer debuts with Cubs

1935 – Great Britain boxers beat US team in 1st intl Golden Gloves

1970 – NY Yankees Horace Clarke breaks up a no-hitter in the 9th for 3rd time in 28 days

1986 – After 14 wins, Roger Clemens suffer his 1st loss of year

1993 – NY Met Anthony Young loses a record 25th straight game (goes to 27)

1995 – Hideo Nomo became the first Japanese player to be selected for a major league baseball All-Star Game.

1996 – Alex Rodriguez became the third youngest player to be selected to the American League All Star team. Dwight Gooden and Ken Griffey Jr. were the two younger than Rodriguez.

2002 – A record 62 home runs were hit in 16 major league baseball games.

Needles, gauze among evidence exhibits at Clemens trial

At least a dozen items of medical waste, including needles, cotton swabs, gauze and tissues, have been included on the government’s list of exhibits as evidence in the upcoming trial of baseball great Roger Clemens, accused of lying about his use of performance enhancing drugs including steroids.

Read more at USA Today

U.S. Supreme Court refuses to reinstate Clemens lawsuit

the rocketphoto © 2009 aaron vazquez | more info (via: Wylio)

The U.S. Supreme Court refused to reinstate Roger Clemens’ defamation suit against his onetime trainer, Brian McNamee, who has said he injected the former all- star pitcher with performance-enhancing drugs.

Read more at The Morning Call

- After all that has happened it would have been so much better if Clemens would have just told the truth to begin with. All the guys who did have moved on.

Today In Sports History: May 21, 2011

1819 – 1st bicycles (swift walkers) in US introduced in NYC

1881 – US Nation Lawn Tennis Association forms

1891 – Boxers Peter Jackson & Jim Corbett fight to a draw in 61 rounds

1926 – White Sox Earl Sheely hits a record 6th consecutive double

1930 – NY Yankee Babe Ruth hits 3 consecutive homers

1943 – Fastest 9 inning AL baseball game (89 mins), White Sox beat Senators

1948 – NY Yankees Joe DiMaggio hits for cycle (single, double, triple, HR)

1952 – Brooklyn Dodgers score 15 runs in 1st inning & beat Cin Reds, 19-1

1966 – Muhammad Ali TKOs Henry Cooper in 6 for Heavyweight boxing title

1968 – Cubs Billy Williams sets outfielder record of 695 straight game

1969 – After 9,015 at bats Hank Aaron is lifted for a pinch hitter, Mike Lum, who doubled in a 15-3 victory over NY Mets

1977 – SD Padres beat Mont Expos, 11-8, in 21 innings

1994 – Reds bat out of order against Dodgers in 2nd inning

1996 – Red Sox pitcher Roger Clemens beats Yankees for his 200th win

2006 – The Swedish ice hockey team Tre Kronor takes gold in the World Championship, becoming the first nation to hold both the World and Olympic titles separately in the same year.

Today In Sports History: May 20, 2011

1734 – 1st Jockey Club forms in SC

1900 – 2nd modern Olympic games opens in Paris (lasted 5 months)

1920 – Policemen raid the Cubs’ bleachers & arrest 24 fans for gambling

1922 – Babe Ruth & Bob Meusel, suspended on October 16, 1921, by Judge Kennesaw Mountain Landis, return to the NY lineup & go hitless

1941 – White Sox Taft Wright sets AL record of RBIs in 13 consecutive games

1946 – Cubs Claude Passeau makes his 1st error since September 21, 1941, ending pitcher’s fielding record of 273 consecutive errorless chances

1948 – Cleveland Indians tie AL record of 18 walks (beat Red Sox 13-4)

1960 – Baseball game in Milwaukee postponed due to dense fog

1964 – Buster Mathis defeats Joe Frazier to qualify for US Olympic team

1983 – Phillies Steve Carlton passes W Johnson with 2nd most strike outs

1984 – Boston’s Roger Clemens beats Twins, 5-4, for his 1st victory

1985 – Indians-Brewers game at Cleveland Stadium is 1st rain-out of 1985, ends record string of 458 ML games since Opening Day without a rain-out

1988 – Mike Schmidt hits his 535th HR, moving into 8th place

1991 – Chicago Bulls Michael Jordan, named NBA’s MVP

1997 – White Sox Frank Thomas reaches base safely for 15th straight time

Today In Sports History: May 6, 2011

1733 – 1st international boxing match: Bob Whittaker beats Tito di Carni

1903 – Chicago White Sox commit 12 errors against Detroit Tigers

1915 – Red Sox Babe Ruth pitching debut & 1st HR, loses to Yanks 4-3 in 15

1921 – American Soccer League forms

1925 – Ty Cobb hits his 5th HR in 2 games tying Cap Ansons record of 1884

1934 – Red Sox score 12 runs in 4th inning including record 4 consecutive triples hit by Carl Reynolds, Moose Solters, Rick Ferrell, & B Walters

1982 – Seattle Mariner Gaylord Perry becomes 15th pitcher to win 300 games

1984 – Baltmore Orioles Cal Ripken Jr hits for cycle

1992 – NY Met Anthony Young begins losing streak of at least 26 games

1994 – Lennox Lewis TKOs Phil Jackson in 8 for Heavyweight boxing title

1995 – Classic Sports Network begins on cable TV

1997 – Rick Pitino becomes coach of Boston Celtics

1998 – Kerry Wood strikes out 20 Houston Astros to tie the major league record held by Roger Clemens. He threw a one-hitter and did not walk a batter in his 5th career start.

Today In Sports History: April 29, 2011

1892 – Charlie Reilly is baseball’s 1st pinch hitter

1922 – 1st official Intl Weightlifting Federation Champ (Tallinn, Estonia)

1934 – Pittsburgh is last major league city to play a home game on a Sunday

1936 – 1st pro baseball game in Japan is played Nagoya defeats Daitokyo, 8-5

1961 – ABC’s “Wide World of Sports, debuts

1981 – Phillie Steve Carlton is 1st lefty to strike out 3,000 batters

1986 – Boston Red Sox Roger Clemens strikes out 20 Seattle Mariners

1988 – Orioles beat White Sox 9-0 for 1st 1988 win after 21 loses

1995 – KC Royal John Nonely is 70th to HR on his 1st at bat

1997 – KC Royal Chili Davis is 75th to hit 300 HRs