Now that the initial MLB investigation is over, I want to apologize for my actions and provide a more specific
account of what I did and why I deserved to be suspended. I have no one to blame but myself. I know that over
the last year and a half I made some serious mistakes, both in the information I failed to share during my
arbitration hearing and the comments I made to the press afterwards.
I have disappointed the people closest to me - the ones who fought for me because they truly believed me all
along. I kept the truth from everyone. For a long time, I was in denial and convinced myself that I had not done
anything wrong.
It is important that people understand that I did not share details of what happened with anyone until recently. My
family, my teammates, the Brewers organization, my friends, agents, and advisors had no knowledge of these
facts, and no one should be blamed but me. Those who put their necks out for me have been embarrassed by my
behavior. I don't have the words to express how sorry I am for that.
Here is what happened. During the latter part of the 2011 season, I was dealing with a nagging injury and I turned
to products for a short period of time that I shouldn't have used. The products were a cream and a lozenge which I
was told could help expedite my rehabilitation. It was a huge mistake for which I am deeply ashamed and I
compounded the situation by not admitting my mistakes immediately.
I deeply regret many of the things I said at the press conference after the arbitrator's decision in February 2012. At
that time, I still didn't want to believe that I had used a banned substance. I think a combination of feeling self
righteous and having a lot of unjustified anger led me to react the way I did. I felt wronged and attacked, but
looking back now, I was the one who was wrong. I am beyond embarrassed that I said what I thought I needed to
say to defend my clouded vision of reality. I am just starting the process of trying to understand why I responded
the way I did, which I continue to regret. There is no excuse for any of this.
For too long during this process, I convinced myself that I had not done anything wrong. After my interview with
MLB in late June of this year, I came to the realization that it was time to come to grips with the truth. I was never
presented with baseball's evidence against me, but I didn't need to be, because I knew what I had done. I realized
the magnitude of my poor decisions and finally focused on dealing with the realities of-and the punishment formy
actions.
I requested a second meeting with Baseball to acknowledge my violation of the drug policy and to engage in
discussions about appropriate punishment for my actions. By coming forward when I did and waiving my right to
appeal any sanctions that were going to be imposed, I knew I was making the correct decision and taking the first
step in the right direction. It was important to me to begin my suspension immediately to minimize the burden on
everyone I had so negatively affected- my teammates, the entire Brewers organization, the fans and all of
MLB. There has been plenty of rumor and speculation about my situation, and I am aware that my admission may
result in additional attacks and accusations from others.
I love the great game of baseball and I am very sorry for any damage done to the game. I have privately expressed
my apologies to Commissioner Selig and Rob Manfred of MLB and to Michael Weiner and his staff at the
Players' Association. I'm very grateful for the support I've received from them. I sincerely apologize to everybody
involved in the arbitration process, including the collector, Dino Laurenzi, Jr. I feel terrible that I put my
teammates in a position where they were asked some very difficult and uncomfortable questions. One of my
primary goals is to make amends with them.
I understand it’s a blessing and a tremendous honor to play this game at the Major League level. I also understand
the intensity of the disappointment from teammates, fans, and other players. When it comes to both my actions
and my words, I made some very serious mistakes and I can only ask for the forgiveness of everyone I let down. I
will never make the same errors again and I intend to share the lessons I learned with others so they don’t repeat
my mistakes. Moving forward, I want to be part of the solution and no longer part of the problem.
I support baseball’s Joint Drug Treatment and Prevention Program and the importance of cleaning up the game.
What I did goes against everything I have always valued- achieving through hard work and dedication, and being
honest both on and off the field. I also understand that I will now have to work very, very hard to begin to earn
back people's trust and support. I am dedicated to making amends and to earning back the trust of my teammates,
the fans, the entire Brewers' organization, my sponsors, advisors and from MLB. I am hopeful that I can earn back
the trust from those who I have disappointed and those who are willing to give me the opportunity. I am deeply
sorry for my actions, and I apologize to everyone who has been adversely affected by them.
What a clown. He is just sorry that he got caught. I have never heard such a lame apology. I had a clouded sense of reality? What does that even mean?
ReplyDeleteExactly! He's sorry he got caught, what a loser. And to say he only took a cream and a sucky candie is such BS. What a lame ass excuse, this guy has a lot to learn about life. It's as if he thinks we're all suckers with that pathetic statement.
ReplyDeleteWho could possibly believe he only took those steroids, at that one time, for a nagging injury. He would have been so much better off, if he simply said, "listen, I screwed up. I shot myself multiple times in my tushy with as many CC's of steroids as my cheeks could possibly handle. The mistake I made, was nearly as big as the needle I used, and I promise to stop my cheating and lying ways. To the poor guy who got fired because of my lies, there's a million dollar check coming your way. To the American people and all baseball fans around the world, I'm going to donate my next year's salary to starting a foundation whose purpose will be to do whatever it can in order to prevent the youth of America from taking steroids. Again, I'm a loser, please forgive me. Ryan Braun."
If he did that, he'd instantly be on the road to being one of baseball's good guys again. But, he didn't. Instead, he played us all for idiots, much like the rest of the cheaters.
Well, the Mets need power hitting outfielders...
ReplyDelete:)
(Hey, it worked with Marlon Byrd, didn't it?) LOL
Brewers pick up half the tab?
ReplyDeleteWhat bugs me more than the cheating is the indignation, the outrage, the fake sanctimony after he beat the rap. He should have shut his piehole and moved on. A "clouded sense of reality"? More like a clouded sense of ethics.
ReplyDeleteI'd still take him in a heartbeat. I'd bet the ML's is full of guys just like him. young, rich, glorified, adored....hard NOT to be an asshole.
That's the thing...Braun acted like a total ahole but I've become so cynical with athletes it doesn't bother me as much as it would have years ago. For the right price I'd welcome him as a player and let him try to redeem himself. If the Mets could trade for him without giving up top prospects and having Milwaukee eat enough $ so he costs no more than 10M per year I'd take him. Put him in left and bat him 5th or 6th. The Mets could add additional talent and treat him as a complimentary player, not a centerpiece. If he doesn't work out or gets suspended again the Mets could easily get off the hook. I'd bet they could eat $2-3M per year and trade him to somewhere else....or if he's suspended they don't have to pay him anything.
ReplyDeleteThere are creeps all over MLB and I don't need to root for choirboys.