Mad Libs are fun. ...here's the bad thing. Not only will you have players names leaked, but before that happens you'll get innocent players' names dragged through the fire by stupid people either trying to have some fun or gain attention.
Why the hell would you post this if you didnt have a good source? Also, why didnt you say something in your original post like "I got this from some random guy on some random internet board." This is exactly what baseball needs right now... random internet trolls that perpetuate myths about the games greatest players. Dont post this trash unless its tagged as such.
when are these names going to be officially out? I have money on Jason Schmidt and maybe Kerry Wood. The look guilty
Another article Pujols,Tejada, and Sosa named Everyone’s guessing about who the blacked-out names in the Jason Grimsley report are, and it has been a fun parlor game so far. But we all knew eventually the names would get out. And we’ve been digging around … and some sources have given us some names. How reliable are these names? We feel pretty confident in them, but we can’t go 100 percent, since the information is secondhand. We’ll say this: If Bud Selig issuing a press release naming the names is a 10, and picking a player at random out of the Baseball Encyclopedia is a 1, we’re at an 8. So. Let’s do it then. Remember: Betting lines are for entertainment purposes only. First: The person who told Grimsley about the positive test in 2003. That’s former Royals general manager Allard Baird. As many people have guessed, one of the “former players” who were sold out by Grimsley: Sammy Sosa. Our source(s) couldn’t confirm if the other was Rafael Palmeiro. Nothing new or exciting about that name. Then it starts to get interesting. We’ve heard amphetamine rumors of Miguel Tejada, but we can’t confirm that. What we can confirm? The doozy. Grimsley says that a former employee of [redacted] and personal fitness trainer to several Major League Baseball players once referred him to an amphetamine source. Later, this source — not the trainer — provided him with “amphetamines, anabolic steroids and human growth hormone.” This trainer? His name is Chris Mihlfeld, a Kansas City-based “strength and conditioning guru.” (And former Strength And Conditioning Coordinator for the Royals.) Does Mihlfeld’s name sound familiar? If it doesn’t, he — and we assure you, this gives us no pleasure to write this — has been Albert Pujols’ personal trainer since before Pujols was drafted by the Cardinals in the 13th round of the 1999 draft. We have no confirmation that Pujols’ name is in the affidavit … but Mihlfeld’s is. If you read the document, it doesn’t say the trainer/Mihlfeld supplied all the HGH and what-not; it just says the trainer was the referrer. Yeah. Sigh. We just report what we’re told, folks. Ever hope your source is wrong? This is one of those times. (UPDATE: OK, we’ve taken our head out of the microwave long enough to update you a bit. First, here’s a blog entry from Mihlfeld’s sister about his friendship with Pujols. And, on a more somewhat damning note, here’s a “diary” Grimsley wrote about his quick recovery from Tommy John surgery. (At MLB.com!) He thanks Mihlfeld for helping him with his recovery. We repeat: We are not claiming that Pujols has taken HGH. We are simply pointing out that Milhfeld is reportedly mentioned in the affidavit, and that he has connections to be Grimsley and Pujols. Now, if you’ll excuse us, we’re going to go back to our silent screams of pain.) http://www.deadspin.com/sports/baseball/so-weve-got-some-affidavit-names-179400.php