Mark McGwire, America’s tarnished baseball hero, the mythical Paul Bunyan with a bat, the man who went in front of a bunch of showboating, preening congressmen and infamously said that he wasn’t there to talk about the past, finally opened up last week and talked about the past, about steroid use and about breaking the hallowed single season home run record while juiced to the hilt.
And the reaction, outside of the expected cacophony of sports press making the same arguments in an insular world, caused such uproar that you could hear a mouse whisper.

As McGwire begins to earn back some respect for finally coming around to publicly admitting what everyone who has followed baseball for the past decade already knew, the credit goes to Ari Fleischer, the man behind the curtain pulling the strings on McGwire’s announcement.
This time, Fleischer’s plan worked.
Fleischer, the former Bush White House press secretary, now runs Ari Fleischer Sports Communications, a crisis communications firm he started in 2008 that does work for the likes of NFL, Major League Baseball and in this case, the St. Louis Cardinals and their new hitting coach, Mark McGwire.
Fleischer implemented the McGwire media rollout and, so to speak, hit a home run.

This was unlike Alex Rodriguez’s calamitous performance-enhancing drugs (PEDs) admission last year, in which the ego-fueled Rodriguez went in his own direction, including a softball interview with ESPN’s Peter Gammons, followed by a few days of silence from the Yankees star, followed by a questionable and insincere press conference.
Fleischer did more than a few things right. He softened the ground with a mid-afternoon statement on Monday, followed by a select round of newspaper interviews.
But the big hit came that night in McGwire’s first TV interview. Fleischer chose the MLB Network, which has gotten considerable credit in its first year on air for its even-handed reporting of the game’s negative stories. The league-owned channel has fewer viewers than had McGwire kicked off Admission Tour 2010 on ESPN or on CBS 60 Minutes.
Fleischer selected Bob Costas as the interviewer, who brought instant credibility. Costas is as reputable a reporter as there is, and conducted a fair, compelling interview, not letting McGwire off the hook.
McGwire would later appear with ESPN’s Bob Ley, but it’s the Costas interview that is most referenced in the blogosphere and MSM and garnered the most attention. You can watch the Costas interview here.

McGwire detailed where he got PEDs, when and why he started taking them. Though his assertion that he only did steroids to slow down his deteriorating health and not for performance reasons is dubious, and shows either a sad naiveté or an inability to be completely honest, at least McGwire addressed his decision-making processes for cheating.
McGwire didn’t come out of the interview reinvented, but he did more than enough to satisfy many baseball fans who are long tired of the steroids story. The pundits wrote the required he-isn’t-sorry-enough columns, but there were just as many “we can now move on and put it behind us” articles.
From a crisis PR standpoint, Fleischer’s timing was brilliant and fortunate.
Announcing in early January, when baseball is as dormant as the apple trees; the day after the NFL’s team of the 2000s, the New England Patriots, got shockingly blown out of the NFL playoffs and while the news of NBA star Gilbert Arenas’ goofy gun play lingers, the timing was perfect given that the goal was to win the truth game then have the story evaporate.
And sometimes when you’re good, you get lucky. Fleischer won the burying-the-story lottery when college football’s most famous coach, Pete Carroll, bolted USC for the NFL’s Seattle Seahawks and was replaced by the questionably qualified Lane Kiffin. That stunning hire diverted even more headlines from McGwire’s PED admission.
By Tuesday morning, MSM columnists started suggesting fellow suspected steroid user Barry Bonds follow McGwire’s path, Fleischer’s plan.
Fleischer wasn’t able to completely close the book on the sad McGwire saga — he’s a consultant, not a magician – but he was able to finally move McGwire into the next chapter of his baseball life, hitting coach for the St. Louis Cardinals.
And in doing so, he took the bull’s-eye off McGwire’s back. Sure, McGwire will have to answer a few questions again early in spring training when he returns to the game for the first time since his retirement as a player, but he won’t have to face a daily barrage from the media.
Fleischer did exactly what he was hired to do.
The first big hit of the year.






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I wonder if "Ari" has ever really produced anything of value in his life?
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You still around? LOL.
No! he's a square…
The Babe's steroids were hot dogs and beer. If he used the 'modern stuff', He'd have hit 200 out of the park.
"And sometimes when you’re good, you get lucky. Fleischer won the burying-the-story lottery when college football’s most famous coach, Pete Carroll, bolted USC for the NFL’s Seattle Seahawks and was replaced by the questionably qualified Lane Kiffin. That stunning hire diverted even more headlines from McGwire’s PED admission."
Okay Mr. Simon. Now you're treading in waters I enjoy. Bring on the ten foot waves.
Maybe I'm completely wrong. If anyone doesn't think that Garrett is an obstacle then perhaps you should revisit SC Football before PC. Dude is a freakin cancer. Who wanted the job before PC? Who!
"Fleischer wasn’t able to completely close the book on the sad McGuire saga" It is sad. The Abbey in Seal Beach banked hardcore from his helpful clubbing days. A lot of people were pulling for him. A lot of people were blinded by the light. But what's not to like about Ari Fleischer. He never surrendered to be the condescending *uck that Gibbs has galvanized into his persona.
And I am a huge dog person now. I'm forgiving Michael Vick as hard as it feels (brutal but I feel he can do it). He should have an opportunity to make things right. So should Mark.
But the record books?
Not to be dense, but why is this on bigjournalism? Fleischer is a PR man, not a journalist. Also, please remind me again why we’re rooting on Ari Fleischer?
Barry Bonds wrote recently:
Steroids and other PED's were good for business..Home run hitters fill the stands, make money, and headlines…..Think any one's gonna pay good money to see Mark's back-up 1st baseman. or my back up centerfielder..?…Everyone knew what was going on from the ball girls to the owners…Instead of clearing the stands by 50 feet, maybe they would have cleared by 20 feet…The'd still be homers…
Besides if muscles made home run hitters, Arnold " the Terminator" Schwarzenegger and Lou " the Hulk" Ferrigno would be legend…
Hitting is all about the eyes, the wrists, timing and coordination……The think differently is naive… Now let us in the HALL…
Hey Fonz ..We were wondering the same about you…
Ari Fleisher was hired by Bud Selig in 2005, per a St Louis newspaper and other sources. Fleisher was hired as a PR consultant to MLB. That begins the trail of his connection to the ridiculous McGwire comeback. Fine that he has a crisis management firm, etc. All respect to this author, there is only one person responsible for every detail of McGwire's comeback and that is Bud Selig. He leaves nothing to chance in the area of baseball's image v steroids. As Selig is first and foremost obsessed with his own image–even though baseball is a legal monopoly and he can do whatever he wants without fear. People who follow baseball closely as I do know Selig has wanted McGwire back in the game for a long time and engineered every detail of it himself. That includes staging it so it looks like everything was a surprise to him til the very end. Selig has his own satellite radio station Sirius XM 175 which began running produced promotional announcements about McGwire over a year ago, replaying homerun calls, etc. This was followed up by strategically placed reports in the NY Times and elsewhere about rumors that McGwire was coming back to the game. The MLB Network is Selig's network. The report would not have gone to anyone else. Fleisher of course is made to look like it was his decision. I could go on, but this article is as far from the truth as you can get. On the other hand, this is exactly the kind of article Selig would like, as it makes it seem like he was not planning every detail of this ridiculous phony charade.
Mr. Bonds, you and any other player who took PED's shouldn't be allowed anywhere near the HALL! You and your pals are crooks. People paid to see a fair game, and were cheated out of their hard earned money. Remember when they used to call professional wrestling the WWF(World Wrestling Federation)? They changed the name to the WWE. World Wrestling Entertainment. Why? Because it was fixed! Fake, and the fans who thought it was real were cheated out of their money. The everybody did it, so I had to do it too excuse is a cop out. Cheaters never win and winners never cheat! I think they call what the players who took PED's did is FRAUD!!!
The whole notion of "sports crisis management" is absurd on it's face, don't you think? I have no respect for McGwire and the others who trashed the record books. Fleischer, as a white house press liason certainly was better than "Scotty" or the bozo Obama has in there, but come on.
You have no idea what you're talking about. The WWE changed their name because they lost a lawsuit to the World Wildfile Fund who claimed that they owned the right to the abbreviation, WWF. It had nothing to do with the fact that wrestling is fake.
All the proven cheaters names in every sport should be removed from the record books as though they never played the game.
Hey, calm down Fireball, Bones has a point…When they used them "to stay in shape", he sez the PED's were NOT banned at that time…(That's in another part of the Barry Bones plea for mercy)…I just took the money part and cut/pasted it……
I really don't care, to me it's just a game with billionaire owners and millionaire players, all in it to put "booties" in seats and more loot in their pockets……I don't get my jollies from pro sports where one sits there for hours eating junk food and swilling beer….We here on the range like calf ropin', barrel racin' and a little indoor body surfin' once in a while…
The Babe would have done the same record if they had steroids then, because the pitchers would be on the juice too.
Steroids adapt your body to the exercise you do with it. They don't always make you bigger. The same amount of the same drugs that can give you a Lance Armstrong body can also give you a bodybuilder's body. A slugger needs muscle, a pitcher needs speed, etc. If you simply assume everyone in sports is on something some of the time, you'll be a lot closer to right than wrong.
It wasn't even illegal or taboo for the first forty years pro athletes took them. Now everything is a laughable hypocritical mess.
Barry, in spite of your bad surley attitude for all the years you played, I think you were a tremendous talent and a real team player. BTW Bones, how many World Series' did you win??
In addition to building mucscle, Steroids increase hand eye coordination and the ability to react quickly. They also increase aggression. So even though you are correct that "hitting is about the eyes, wrists, timing and coordination", you need to understand that steroids have a huge affect on those things.
I moved to San Ramon California in 1989 when Mark and Jose Canseco both played for the A's. They both went to Club Sport, a gym I joined when I moved there. Canseco would blow off anyone who approached him, including kids. Mark always took the time to be polite and knocked himself out for any kid who approached him. He was a gentleman and a decent guy then and I believe he still is.
The roid issue will never be over. Most players will do anything to better their game. Back in the day, players never lifted weights now they all do. Is that cheating?
I think it's time to put the scar behind us and let players like Mcgwire in the Hall of Fame. He was great for the game. Bonds, on the other hand, was always an A-Hole and still is. He should get two astriks, one for roids and one for being an A-Hole
I will NEVER forgive M. Vick!!!
He strangeld and tortured a lhelpless animal while smiling!
He is sick slimey brely human!
I'm personally not a big fan of professional sports, Mr. McGwire's behavior being a prime example. That said, I have great respect for Ari Fleischer. Following 9/11, I listened to daily press conferences on the radio for months. That was such a stressful time for anyone who lived and worked in DC, and I appreciated his calm demeanor and respectful responses. His professionalism is in stark contrast to the neckless tool that is the current WH press secretary. I don't think he gets the credit he deserves for his role in diffusing a lot of misinformation and hysteria that was perpetuated by the press in the days and weeks following the attacks. I'm glad someone recognized his talents and that he his getting well compensated for them. To me, he will always be the one of the few souls that was given the responsibility of leading the American people out of one of the darkest times in our history. I consider him a patriot and wish him all the best.
Two words…..Pete Rose.
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