Wow, I expected the MLB to say this, but for Mitchell to recommend it means that is what this whole witch hunt turns out to be. A whole lot of nothing other than show that steroids is rampant, so do something about changing the climate MLB and MLBPA.
That is all, don't punish anyone... play ball.
You gotta believe that was already know by those making deals like the one Houston made yesterday. No one is going to be penalized from the report.
Oh come on, This moved way beyond simply identifying and punishing offenders long ago. That's why it irritates me to now end how people and the media are only concerned with one thing: Names.
This is about the pervasive problem that baseball itself allowed, and I think in some cases may have even encouraged. This is about the mortaging of competition and integrity for the sake of more powerful (i.e. "attention-getting") performances of the players. Read the Mitchell report between the lines and you see that MLB and the individual clubs would have been crazy to dampen the machine once it got roaring. They saw what McGuire and Sosa did in 1998, and they weren't about to dampen that high, regardless of the cost. That, to me, is the bigger crime: not that the individuals took the steroids (because you expect certain individuals to make bad but well-meaning mistakes), but the level of complicity that the sport as a whole showed through that time.
So you want to punish people? Start by punishing the league or the owner. Are you going to take away championships? Give refunds to ticket-holders? Close up the whole damn league? Enforcing punishment at this stage of the problem would simply create new problems and REALLY turn this whole thing into a witch hunt. This is the Steroids Era for all time, and everyone is implicated. That's the greatest punishment.