The odds are against Alex Rodriguez in federal court as he tries to overturn his season-long drug suspension. For the past five decades, the U.S. Supreme Court has set narrow grounds for judges to consider when evaluating lawsuits to overturn
Three days after voters for baseball's Hall of Fame again rejected some of the game's legends because of their involvement — some proven, some suspected — with performance-enhancing drugs, an arbitrator delivered the most damning punishment to one
So this ends the way it was always going to end with Alex Rodriguez, after all the sound and fury from him and his people about what a victim he was, all the shouting that did everything except shout away the evidence against him: He was going to be
Rodriguez will miss the entire 2014 season as his 211-game suspension was shortened.
While Horowitz's written opinion won't be made public (one person familiar with it said it is "brutal" in regard to Rodriguez), not one detail has emerged to suggest A-Rod is some innocent. Even a few folks on his side have suggested that some penalty