On October 27, 2065, the Player and their partner, Jacob Hendricks, infiltrate a base in Ethiopia as part of a Winslow Accord operation to rescue hostages from the tyrannical NRC, assisted by Commander John Taylor and his team of cybernetically enhanced soldiers. The rescue is successful, but the Player is critically wounded, necessitating the installation of cybernetic enhancements to save their life. The Player is also given a Direct neural interface (DNI) to control their cybernetics, and is given virtual training inside it from Taylor and his team (Sebastian Diaz, Sarah Hall, and Peter Maretti) while undergoing surgery. Hendricks also decides to undergo cybernetic enhancements.…
Not only is Derek Sanderson Jeter a first-round-draft professional baseball player for the Yankees, he is one of the few scandal-free and classy baseball players in the sport’s steroid-driven era. Derek Jeter is a professional baseball player who played 20 seasons in Major League Baseball for the New York Yankees. He is a five-time world series champion, and he is regarded as a central figure for the Yankees success in the late 90s and early 2000s, where he helped lead his team to four World Series titles. He guided his team to success through his hitting, base running, fielding, and leadership. Jeter is the Yankees’ all time career leader in hits, doubles, games played, stolen bases, times on base, and at bats. He has received 14 All-Star…
After only five months with the Baltimore Orioles, The Boston Red Sox purchased Babe's contract, and he became a Major Leaguer at the tender age of 19. He pitched and played outfield for the Red Sox for the next six years. Ruth made an immediate impact both on and off the field. Stories of his off-the-field eating and drinking escapades have become as legendary as his baseball accomplishments.…
Leroy “Satchel” Paige acquired his name because he carried suitcases and satchels for passengers at the Union Station in Mobile, Alabama. Satchel was a famous African American forced to play in his own league, separate from whites.…
Alex Rodriguez, a renowned MLB Seattle Mariners and Texas Ranger player, was found in the middle of a drug scandal during 3013 when he was accused of injecting performance enhancing drugs (PEDs) into his body. The Miami Times acted as old-fashioned muckrackers by revealing Biogenesis, an anti-aging clinic supervised by Tony Bosch. Bosch and his medical practice was exposed as “PED peddlers” that attracted major league baseball players from various MLB teams. Porter Fischer, a former employee at Biogenesis, tipped off The Miami Times after failure to receive pay from Tony Bosch and months of disagreeing with the events taking place within the medical office. After Fischer’s contact with local news channels a list of accused players surfaced and the MLB’s decade long battle to keep drugs out of America’s favorite sport had been won by performance enhancing drugs.…
Richard Ramirez was a California-based serial killer who operated from 1984 to 1985. He was born in El Paso, Texas, but eventually moved out to California. He was known as the “Night Stalker” because he would break into homes at night, raping and killing his victims. Ramirez got his start early, as he (unsurprisingly) had a rough childhood. His father was known to abuse him, and he spent some time in juvenile detention for petty crimes. He also sustained two major head injuries as a child, having a dresser fall on him and being knocked out by a swing at a park. However, he was heavily influenced by his cousin Mike, who was a Green Beret who had returned from the war in Vietnam. Mike told Richard graphic stories about the women he raped, tortured, and…
Richard Ramirez was serial killer who went on a two rampage killing innocent people in southern California. He raped and tortured more than 25 victims and killed more than a dozen of them. Most of these victims were killed in their own homes; as he would find opened windows and doors in the night to kill his victims. But what were the contributing factors that maybe helped mold Richard Ramirez into this brutal serial killer who seemed to have no conscious? Was he born with the so- called “bad seed”, or was it events in his life that contributed and somewhat opened the door for him to be a murderer. There have been accounts stated that while Richards mother was carrying him in her womb she was having health issues almost as if her body was rejecting…
As people have wondered, “Who is, or was, the best baseball player to ever live?” Stan Musial batted over a .331 average in his career ("Encyclopedia Britannica Online"). He also lead the St. Louis Cardinals into 3 World Series titles as MVP (“Wikipedia”). In 2011, he received the Freedom Medal of Honor, one of the highest civilian awards to be given (“Wikipedia”). Stan Musial was one of the greatest baseball players that has been seen to this date, batting with over a .331 average, being voted as MVP over a total of 5 times, and ranking 2nd in NL history.…
Rose is now notorious for gambling while he was manager for the Cincinnati Reds. With his crime against the MLB, people think he should be recognized as a player and not as a manager. Jayson Stark, senior writer for ESPN, writes, “I would like to volunteer for a job no one in baseball will hire me to do. I would like to be the guy who writes Pete Rose’s Hall of Fame plague”() Stark believes that Rose should be able to enter into the Hall of Famed to his accomplishments as a baseball player not as a manager. Rose had 4,256 hit over his…
Moller also says, “Just as the vast majority of people try marijuana at some point in their lives, the vast majority of baseball players have used steroids” (Moller 549).I’m sure there are plenty of people who have tried marijuana, including baseball players; however, if it’s true that the vast majority of baseball players have used steroids, then we can assume that steroid use is just part of being a baseball player. I hope that that isn’t true, because then baseball isn’t really a sport about skill, rather than who can get their hands on the better…
However, that is not to say that their has never been corruption within the sport baseball in past years. We all know about the Black Sox Scandal involving “Shoeless” Joe Jackson along with seven other players on the White Sox that threw the 1919 World Series to the Cincinnati Reds. There also has been recent speculation of whether Pete Rose should have his lifetime ban lifted after his actions of gambling while he was a player at the time. Everybody has their own opinion about the situation of Pete Rose and it is the most recent scandal of our time that we can elaborate on (Weinbaum & Rovell, 2015).…
Baseball legend Pete Rose once said, “I’d walk through hell and gasoline to play baseball.” This quote gives anyone unfamiliar with who Pete Rose is a great understanding of how much he loved the game of baseball. Pete Rose’s entire life revolved around the game of baseball. He was a hometown hero and played 24 seasons of professional baseball. From 1963-1986, Rose collected more base hits than any player to ever play the game which would make him a sure first ballot Hall of Famer. However on August 24th, 1989 Rose was banned from the game of baseball for life. Pete Rose was banned by MLB commissioner Angelo Bartlett "Bart" Giamatti for gambling on the game of baseball. I want to inform readers of whom Pete Rose is, what type of player he was, and the mistake he made. The question still remains today whether or not the ban on Pete Rose should be lifted, allowing him to apply for his induction into baseball’s Hall of Fame. I personally…
Barry Bonds, for the non-sports fans, played 22 seasons in Major League Baseball (the MLB),…
Mark McGwire admitted to using steroids throughout his professional baseball career. The admission of steroid use caused many cases of questioning of whether or not his long list of accomplishments should be rebutted. His most famous accomplishment undoubtedly took place in the 1998 season when he broke the single season home run record previously held by Roger…
In 1979 there was the Pittsburgh drug trials and that began new drug rules. “Probably the clearest evidence that the use of performance-enhancing drugs in baseball did not start in the mid-90's with steroids, comes in the form of the Pittsburgh drug trials, a scandal which rocked MLB a decade earlier” (2). The whole Pittsburgh team went to trial and it affected their playing that year. Drugs in the MLB are still an issue today like multiple professional…