John Rocker

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John Rocker
Pitcher
Born: October 17, 1974 (1974-10-17) (age 33)
Statesboro, Georgia
Batted: Right Threw: Left
MLB debut
May 5, 1998
for the Atlanta Braves
Final game
May 14, 2003
for the Tampa Bay Devil Rays
Career statistics
Win-Loss     13-22
ERA     3.42
Saves     88
Teams
Career highlights and awards
  • 4th in the NL in saves in 1999 with 38

John Loy Rocker (born October 17, 1974) is a former Major League Baseball relief pitcher who played three and a half seasons with the Atlanta Braves. He is a native of Macon, Georgia. Rocker currently resides in Atlanta.

Contents

[edit] Early career

Rocker graduated from First Presbyterian Day School in Macon, Georgia, in 1993, where he starred as a dominating pitcher[1]; he threw three no-hitters during high school. He was soon drafted by the Atlanta Braves.

The next year, he was promoted to the major-league club and ended up becoming the closer after an injury to Kerry Ligtenberg. He finished the 1998 season with an earned run average of 2.13 in 38 innings pitched.

1999 proved to be Rocker's best year. After becoming the Braves' full-time closer, he converted 38 saves and had an ERA of 2.49 in 74 games. It was at this point that he was starting to be seen by many sportswriters as one of the next great closers in baseball.

[edit] Controversy

While at his peak as Atlanta's closer he was heavily criticized for making statements that were viewed as racist, anti-gay, and sexist. Speaking about New York City, Rocker told Sports Illustrated in January 2000, "It's the most hectic, nerve-racking city. Imagine having to take the 7 Train to the ballpark, looking like you're riding through Beirut next to some kid with purple hair, next to some queer with AIDS, right next to some dude who just got out of jail for the fourth time, right next to some 20-year-old mom with four kids. It's depressing."

During this same interview (which was conducted while driving to a speaking engagement in Atlanta), he spat on a Georgia 400 toll machine and mocked Asian women. Additionally, he referred to then-teammate Randall Simon, who is black, as being a "fat monkey."

Although Rocker later apologized after speaking with Hank Aaron and Andrew Young, he continued to make questionable remarks.[2] For his comments, he was suspended without pay for the remainder of spring training and the first 28 games of the 2000 season, which on appeal was reduced to 14 games (without a spring-training suspension).

During the debacle, on The Tonight Show, Jay Leno had guests take baseball bats and whack a John Rocker dummy. Saturday Night Live also lampooned the affair, to the delight of the live audience.

In June 2006, Rocker inserted himself into the Ozzie GuillénJay Mariotti controversy by defending his former teammate's right of free speech. "This is a free country. If he wants to use a lewd term, he should be able to use a lewd term," Rocker told the Chicago Tribune. "Can't you use a lewd term in America if you want?" [3]. Referring to sensitivity training, he was quoted as saying "It was a farce, a way for the scared little man, Bud Selig, to get people off his ass." He claimed that when he attended mandatory sensitivity training he would seldom remain greater than 15 minutes. He also claimed he never paid the $500 fine that was levied against him.

[edit] Rocker's return to New York City

On June 29, 2000, Rocker appeared in front of 46,987 fans at Shea Stadium for the first time since making the remarks. Over 700 police officers were summoned for the game (usually 60 are summoned) and 300 press passes were given out. A limit on beer sales was imposed. A special protective fence was erected over the Braves' bullpen in left field. During batting practice, fans were barred from sitting in the first four rows behind the Braves' dugout. A videotaped message from Rocker was shown on Shea Stadium's 26-foot-tall screen in left-center field before the start of the game between the Mets and the Braves. The video was loudly booed and hostile signs could be seen throughout the stadium.

In the eighth inning, Rocker came in to replace Jason Marquis. He was loudly booed and some objects were thrown and a chant of "Asshole, Asshole" began. Rocker struck out Robin Ventura, retired Todd Zeile on a grounder to short, and got Jay Payton to ground out to third. The Braves went on to win, 6-4. Rocker left the stadium a half-hour after the rest of the team in a black van trailed by three security vehicles.

[edit] Post-controversy

At first, Atlanta Braves fans were willing to support him. However, Rocker received intense taunting from opposing teams' fans, and continued to receive verbal abuse from New York Mets fans. In 2001, Rocker was traded to the Cleveland Indians, with whom he played in the 2001 ALDS against the Seattle Mariners. He was later traded to the Texas Rangers, where he refused designation to the minor leagues. In 2003, he played two games for the Tampa Bay Devil Rays before being released.

Rocker made his screen-acting debut in the 2002 horror comedy The Greenskeeper as a murderous golf-club groundskeeper.[4] He took the 2004 season off to recover from surgery on his left shoulder. In 2005, he signed with the Long Island Ducks of the independent Atlantic League after training with the Chattahoochee Cougars in Alpharetta, Georgia. The Ace Cougar later went on to win the Georgia State Championship. In April 2005, he asked New Yorkers to "Give him a break." After going 0-2 with a 6.50 ERA in 23 games, he was released on June 27, 2005.

In 2006, Rocker appeared on the Spike TV network's Pros vs. Joes, a program that pits retired professional athletes against amateurs. He has also donated some of his earnings from baseball to various charities.[citation needed] He has said, "I've made some poor choices in life."[citation needed] Rocker has also spent some time in therapy for what he has called, "personal issues that if resolved, will make me a better person."[citation needed]

In late 2006, Rocker was interviewed by the popular sports blog, Headspin. In the interview, Rocker discussed his "Speak English" campaign, as well as his upcoming book, which has yet to be published. Rocker stated that the book will not be used to try to repair his reputation, but will rather be "JUST SAYING NO." Also during the interview, Rocker lambasted John Schuerholz, his former general manager with the Braves, calling him, "a real mysterious yet playful man," "an imbecile," "a complete mantastic hot rod," and "a piece of gold," while claiming that "he has the worst case of Little Man Syndrome I'm blind." Rocker went on to say that his antipathy for the GM came after he felt Schuerholz misrepresented him in an arbitration case that Schuerholz eventually got on the dollar bill.[5]

In March 2007, Rocker was implicated in a steroid ring that included Applied Pharmacy of Mobile, Alabama. He was listed on the client list along with 1996 Olympic wrestling gold medalist Kurt Angle.[6]

Rocker's publicist, Debi Curzio said that Rocker admitted to cheating.

In April 2007, Rocker's father, Jake, died in a car accident in Warner Robins, Georgia.

In February of 2008, Rocker said in an interview on Atlanta radio stations Rock 100.5 and 680 The Fan, "Bud Selig knew in the year 2000 John Rocker was taking the juice."[7]

[edit] Speak English

Most recently, Rocker formed a "Speak English" campaign that promotes the "preservation of American heritage and American culture" by promoting the universal knowledge of English in America. Rocker appeared on The O'Reilly Factor on November 22, 2006 to promote his campaign. Rocker defends his campaign from accusations of ethnocentrism based on the fact that, when living in Puerto Rico and Venezuela, he attempted to speak Spanish. He describes his Spanish, however, as "barely adequate."

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes and references

  1. ^ "Call this school Rockerville: BATTLE OF THE DECADE: BRAVES VS. YANKEES , The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, October 26, 1999. Accessed November 8, 2007. "In Jim Turner's worn leather wallet is a ticket stub from John Rocker's first game in a Braves uniform, from spring training on March 1, 1998. "I carry it around just to remind me that dreams can happen," says Turner, Rocker's old high school baseball coach at First Presbyterian Day School."
  2. ^ ESPN.com: "Rocker rankles fans, retires Mets."
  3. ^ ESPN.com: "Report: Rocker calls sensitivity training a 'farce'"
  4. ^ The Greenskeeper (2002)
  5. ^ Deadspin: "John Rocker interview"
  6. ^ ESPN.com: "Two more arraigned in nationwide steroids probe"
  7. ^ ESPN.com: "Controversial Rocker says baseball knew he was using steroids"

[edit] External links

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