The Commissioner of Baseball and I had a chat Monday afternoon. This came after messages from a couple of sources reached my cell phone, including from Twins President Dave St. Peter.
"The man in Milwaukee would like to speak to you," St. Peter said.
I assumed this to be Bud Selig, and the subject to be a column offered in Sunday's Star Tribune that it was time for the commissioner to step aside in favor of a replacement ready to "declare war on the cheats and restore trust in the Tarnished Old Game."
Some of what Selig had to say in Monday's 30-minute dissertation was either off the record or not suitable for daily newspaper consumption. Most of what I had to say in brief responses was "uh," "er," or "ah."
This lopsided conversation took place a few hours before ESPN ran an interview in which Alex Rodriguez admitted to being a steroids user during three seasons (2001-03) with Texas.
This was an offshoot of the story that broke on Sports Illustrated's website Saturday revealing A-Rod had tested positive for two steroids in 2003.
A more in-depth investigative piece will appear in SI's print edition today. Apparently, there will be greater detail on another bombshell that was part of SI's website report:
The allegation that Gene Orza, the CEO of the Major League Baseball Players Association, tipped off A-Rod in September 2004 that he would be tested for steroids later that month.