Line up all professional baseball players next to NBA players and NFL players, then tell me which sport has a steroid problem. NFL/NBA players are like greek gods next to MLB players and they play a sport that is at least 15 times as physically demanding. It amazes me the number of people who hold the viewpoint that baseball is the game full of "cheaters," the one with the bad image. If you are going to say using performance enhancers amounts to some disgraceful form of cheating that takes integrity from the game, then at least be consistent and apply it to all sports. To look at the NFL, where all violations fly under the radar and the NBA, where they are using the WWF 1989 testing system, hand out a free pass to those, then look at baseball, where they have addressed the issue to the point of destroying the reputations of a number of recent great players -- Bonds, A-Rod, Clemens, McGwire, Sosa, Palmeiro, Braun, Manny, etc, have done so at the expense of the sport's popularity and continue to have the harshest system and end up at the conclusion that of the three baseball is the bad one when it comes to dealing with enhancers...on what planet are you living? Ryan Braun violated a rule, got caught and will pay the penalty. What do NFL players get these days, four games and .0001 percent of the negative attention MLB players do? NBA? We are still waiting for a violator to see what the penalty is. What do the masses who have their opinions spoonfed to them by ESPN think... A) MLB has a much larger steroid problem than other, far more physically demanding sports with far more impressive physical specimens and yet they continue to have a nonchalant stance on the issue B) All the sports have this issue but it only cuts to the integrity of the game in baseball C) They aren't thinking at all D) Other (please explain) Everybody who has subscribed to the mainstream narrative can pick one of those. The correct answer, if your senses have been working properly, is that all the major sports have this so-called problem (my high school had this same problem in 1998). If you do have a real issue, you should be happy with MLB's handling of it to the vast detriment of their league and completely disgusted by the lack of attention given to it in other, far more thriving leagues who have wisely chosen the more profitable avenue.