1tnacU wrote:And here I thought stupid = saying something is easily provable and then saying that it's incapable of being proven. Especially when the thing you're trying to prove has never been brought to fruition. In fact, the only time it was brought before a judge, it was bitchslapped even harder than you've been in this thread. Not to mention, that one case... it was a much more egregious offense than what you submitted.
Keep ignoring the Neagle case. It can only hurt your argument. The players union now has agreed in principle that the clause CAN be enforced. For the first time in modern baseball, the player's union allowed a player contract to be reduced in value as a direct result of a player's off the field conduct.
Also... not to mention it could be easily argued that Giambi took steroids in the interest of furthering his career and thus helping the team, and you really think the team could "easily" invoke the morals clause then? I, of course, don't plan on proving the argument that I'm submitting, only that I think I'm right, and you therefore, are wrong. Sound familiar?
You cannot break the law and then claim it was meant to "help the team". Furthermore, if Giambi roided up in Oakland, then he was inflating his value through fraudulent means. There's no WAY you can spin that as being in the best interests of the Yankees.
You may now remove the plunger. I'm done with you.
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