It's ridiculous that someone out there has the names of another 103 players, each earning a ridiculous salary, who cheated. Barry Bonds, Roger Clemens, Mark McGwire, Andy Pettitte, Alex Rodriguez and every other one of the as-yet-unnamed 103 dopers should be permanently barred from the hall of fame and have their records deleted. There is simply no room in professional athletics for admitted cheaters, who only come clean when their misdeeds have finally landed them before the court of public opinion.
The belated apologies and lame excuses only serve to make the admissions even more infuriating. When I was coaching novice rowers at RIT, I told them that they would all screw up at some point in the season. They would oversleep, miss a workout, forget to pick up a teammate before practice, etc. I didn't care why they screwed up and neither would their boat mates. What was important was that they decided to man up, admit their mistake, accept the punishment, and avoid repeating the same screw-up in the future. I didn't accept excuses. All I wanted to hear was, "Coach, I f**ked up." I would like to recommend a similar policy for professional athletes. At this point, no one cares why you cheated. We know it was the money. The only shot at redemption is coming clean before SI or ESPN forces the issue.