About Fay Vincent: Francis Thomas "Fay" Vincent, Jr. is a former entertainment lawyer and sports executive who served as the eighth Commissioner of Major League Baseball from September 13, 1989 to September 7, 1992.
This is a coup for commissioner Bud Selig. I'm surprised it's as good as it is.
Certainly toward the end of the season, you and I could be in a ballpark and they might say the crowd is 30,000, and we could look around and see that there was no more than 10,000.
It was a terrible day for baseball, it was a worse day for Congress.
I think it would have been a lot better for him to say, I did it and I'm sorry, McGwire was never one to show a lot of emotion on the field, not a player who sought attention and craved to be thought of as a nice guy.
It's tempting, because as one senator said to me, 'We know if we invite baseball down, we'll draw a crowd'.
I believe that, too, it's hard to believe that anybody could not believe that.
It's not in baseball's interest or the players' interest to be taking this stance. It's the people's game.
I can't be optimistic. I can be hopeful.
The final ballots represent players, managers, executives and builders who are top-tier candidates and worthy of review for consideration for election to the Hall of Fame.
The economics of baseball are the big problem. The big clubs make a lot of money and the little clubs don't.