How is it possible for the best hitter (Barry 
                    Bonds) in the National League in 2007 to be unable to find 
                    a job with any team in Major League Baseball in 2008? How 
                    is it possible for the greatest hitter in the history of Major 
                    League Baseball (Barry Bonds), after being the best hitter 
                    in the National League in 2007, to be unable to get a job 
                    with any team in Major League Baseball in 2008?
                  Here’s my computed Run Production Averages 
                    (RPA) for the top 27 hitters in Major League baseball in the 
                    2007 season (minimum 400 computed plate appearances, as per 
                    RPA method). My method shows the season adjusted value of 
                    each plate appearance in terms of the runs produced by that 
                    batter per the RPA formula that I previously described in 
                    my Mike 
                    Gimbel's Baseball Player and Team Ratings 1995 (Mike Gimbel's 
                    Baseball Player and Team Ratings)
:
                  
                     
                      |  1. | 
                      Alex Rodriguez | 
                      .205 | 
                    
                     
                      | 2. | 
                       Carlos Pena | 
                      .205 | 
                    
                     
                      | 3. | 
                      Barry Bonds | 
                      .204 | 
                    
                     
                      | 4. | 
                      Chipper Jones | 
                      .197 | 
                    
                     
                      | 5. | 
                      David Ortiz | 
                      .194 | 
                    
                     
                      | 6. | 
                      David Wright | 
                      .190 | 
                    
                     
                      | 7. | 
                      Jack Cust | 
                      .185 | 
                    
                     
                      | 8. | 
                       Ryan Braun | 
                      .183 | 
                    
                     
                      | 9. | 
                      Prince Fielder | 
                      .176 | 
                    
                     
                      | 10. | 
                      Jim Thome | 
                      .176 | 
                    
                     
                      | 11. | 
                       Magglio Ordonez | 
                      .175 | 
                    
                     
                      | 12. | 
                       Curtis Granderson | 
                      .175 | 
                    
                     
                      | 13. | 
                      Mark Teixeira | 
                      .174 | 
                    
                     
                      | 14. | 
                      Hanley Ramirez | 
                      .173 | 
                    
                     
                      | 15. | 
                      Adam Dunn | 
                      .171 | 
                    
                     
                      | 16. | 
                      Chase Utley | 
                      .171 | 
                    
                     
                      | 17. | 
                      Rickie Weeks | 
                      .171 | 
                    
                     
                      | 18. | 
                      Grady Sizemore | 
                      .170 | 
                    
                     
                      | 19. | 
                      Albert Pujols | 
                      .169 | 
                    
                     
                      | 20. | 
                      Chris Duncan | 
                      .168 | 
                    
                     
                      | 21. | 
                       Matt Holliday | 
                      .167 | 
                    
                     
                      | 22. | 
                      Carlos Beltran | 
                      .167 | 
                    
                     
                      | 23. | 
                      Corey Hart  | 
                      .165 | 
                    
                     
                      | 24. | 
                      Jorge Posada | 
                      .163 | 
                    
                     
                      | 25. | 
                      Lance Berkman | 
                      .162 | 
                    
                     
                      | 26. | 
                       Pat Burrell | 
                      .162 | 
                    
                     
                      | 27. | 
                      Chone Figgins | 
                      .160 | 
                    
                  
                  Are you going to tell me that there isn’t a 
                    single team that could use Barry Bonds’ big bat? Tell me just 
                    one team that doesn’t have room on their 25-man roster for 
                    the greatest hitter in MLB history! Barry Bonds has not been 
                    convicted of anything. He has not been accused of betting 
                    on games or throwing games. Barry Bonds has not been accused 
                    of assaulting anyone. Barry Bonds has been accused of not 
                    being a nice guy by the media, but is that a crime?
                  
                  Barry Bonds has been accused of not telling 
                    the truth to a Grand Jury investigating BALCO. Barry Bonds 
                    does not own BALCO and does not distribute steroids on behalf 
                    of BALCO. Why was the Grand Jury investigating Barry Bonds? 
                    Weren’t they supposed to be investigating BALCO? How did that 
                    “investigation” of BALCO turn into a witch-hunt directed against 
                    MLB players? Clearly, BALCO wasn’t the real target in the 
                    racist campaign against Barry Bonds.
                  I am my union’s delegate to the New York City 
                    Central Labor Council. During my union work I have been a 
                    grievance representative. 
As 
                    such, I have often represented union members who have been 
                    brought up on charges for both minor and major infractions. 
                    Members could get fired for directly disobeying an order or 
                    for incompetence or for various serious infractions. The only 
                    time that the member faced suspension, however, was when the 
                    member posed an immediate danger. 
                  What “immediate danger” to Major League Baseball 
                    does Barry Bonds pose, that requires Barry Bonds’ suspension 
                    prior to a decision in Bonds’ upcoming trial? In fact, wouldn’t 
                    the presence of Barry Bonds on a Major League Baseball team 
                    roster (the Baltimore Orioles, for instance) be an immediate 
                    big boost to that team’s attendance as well as a big boost 
                    to their chances of winning? 
                  
In 
                    effect, MLB teams are willing to lose money rather than hire 
                    Barry Bonds. Isn’t that the definition of a Blacklist? The 
                    actors, singers, directors, etc… who were Blacklisted during 
                    the McCarthy era witch hunt were money makers for the entertainment 
                    industry, yet no owner would hire them! Isn’t that exactly 
                    what is happening with Barry Bonds? Weren’t many of these 
                    talented performers indicted and some convicted for refusing 
                    to cooperate with Grand Juries and dragged before government 
                    staged hearings in front of hundreds of cameras and reporters? 
                    Years later many of those blacklisted were apologized to, 
                    but did that apology make up for the destruction of their 
                    livelihoods and their personal lives during the McCarthy “Blacklisting”? 
                    Of course not!
                  
                  I have a special disgust for the owners of 
                    the San Francisco Giants. They made $millions off Barry Bonds. 
                    They were able to build a money making stadium based, to a 
                    great extent, on Barry Bonds. Where is their gratitude? Nowhere! 
                    He was their star player who was loved by the fans in the 
                    Bay area, yet the SF Giants team owners shamefully released 
                    Barry Bonds after the 2007 season so as to do their part in 
                    the “Blacklisting”! They deserve a “Hall of Shame” of their 
                    own!
                  Years from now, when Major League Baseball 
                    is forced to apologize to Barry Bonds for their actions, that 
                    apology will never make up for the crime that Major League 
                    Baseball is inflicting today on Barry Bonds and on the many 
                    fans who admire the athletic greatness that Barry Bonds has 
                    been as a player. I also admire him for his unbending, “in 
                    your face” attitude, as he’s been enduring during this constant 
                    attack from the big business media, especially the sports 
                    talk radio and cable channels that have to fill 24 hour a 
                    day air time by creating controversy and scandal where there 
                    would have been little or none before those media outlets 
                    were created.
                  
I 
                    appeal to the fans of Major League Baseball to bombard their 
                    team owners with letters and emails and petitions demanding 
                    that their team hire Barry Bonds. Imagine, for instance, Barry 
                    Bonds added to the roster of the woeful offense of the Baltimore 
                    Orioles. Imagine the magical confrontations in the American 
                    League East with David Ortiz and Manny Ramirez at Fenway 
                    Park and Camden Yards and with Alex Rodriguez and Derek Jeter at Yankee 
                    Stadium and Camden Yards. Wouldn’t that do wonders for attendance 
                    for a Baltimore Orioles franchise that has been down in the 
                    dumps for so long? 
                  An historic wrong is being committed by the 
                    owners. Do we want to have a posthumous apology to Barry Bonds, 
                    as was done for Jim Thorpe, or do we correct this wrong NOW? 
                    Barry Bonds is this era’s Babe Ruth. He’s the biggest star 
                    in our national pastime!
                  I appeal to the fans to help us right this 
                    wrong. I want to see Barry Bonds playing baseball in 2008!
                  To all concerned fans: Perhaps you could use 
                    the above as a petition circulated at stadiums or handed out 
                    at stadium gates. While ending the Iraq Occupation and fighting 
                    for a moratorium on home foreclosures take precedence, I know 
                    that millions of you will still be in attendance at MLB games. 
                    While there, couldn’t you also do your part in fighting against 
                    the shameful “Blacklisting” of Barry Bonds, the greatest hitter 
                    in Major League Baseball history?
                  BlackCommentator.com Guest 
                    Commentator, Mike Gimbel, is a former Consultant on Player 
                    Evaluation for the Boston Red Sox and 
                    the Montreal Expos. Click 
                    Here to contact Mr. Gimbel.
                  