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Baseball reconsiders postgame tradition

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Associated Press

Marcus Giles was a little too rushed to talk. He had to check out some new suits that were being delivered to the visiting clubhouse at Turner Field.

But, as the San Diego second baseman rushed toward the door, he yelled back his two cent’s worth on the latest hot-button issue:

“Keep the beer in the clubhouse!”

Giles’ plea aside, it seems another of baseball’s time-honored traditions is going the way of wool uniforms and daytime World Series games. At least 13 teams now prohibit beer and other alcoholic beverages from being consumed in the clubhouse, several teams spurred by the recent alcohol-related death of St. Louis pitcher Josh Hancock.

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For players who enjoyed winding down from a game with a brew in hand, it seems an unreasonable step -- especially since Hancock was killed in a wreck about six hours after he left Busch Stadium.

No one has implied he downed even one beer at the park before he headed out for a night on the town that went horribly wrong.

“It’s not fair for those who can control themselves,” Braves outfielder Andruw Jones said. “Some guys just like to have a couple of beers to calm their nerves after a game.”

For others, it only makes sense.

“Why would any employer want to be liable for something that could potentially occur, especially when you think about the investments they are making in us?” Cubs catcher Michael Barrett said. “As unfortunate as everything has turned out to be, it’s probably overall going to be a good thing for baseball and baseball players.”

Visiting players don’t have to worry about getting behind the wheel when they leave the stadium; buses are provided to take them to their hotel. As for the home team, many players let their wives, girlfriends or other family members handle the driving on the way home.

“When guys hang around and do drink, they’re usually just trying to let the traffic die down,” Jones said. “People know what to do. It’s not fair for any team or Major League Baseball to ban alcohol. We’re all man enough to control ourselves.”

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But in the early morning hours of April 29, Hancock crashed a SUV into the back of a flatbed tow truck stopped in a driving lane. Police, who discovered marijuana in the car, said he was drunk and talking on a cell phone.

The Cardinals acted within days, banning beer from their clubhouse at Busch Stadium. Other teams quickly followed, locking up the refrigerator or cutting off the tap in their clubhouses.

White Sox manager Ozzie Guillen already was one of the most vocal critics of barring beer from the clubhouse.

Earlier this season, he mocked the A’s for a ban that went into effect after Oakland’s Esteban Loaiza was arrested for drunk driving last year.

Hancock’s death did little to soften Guillen’s outspoken opposition. “They should cut it off because they don’t want (players to) drink,” Guillen said. “But you’re going to cut it off because something real bad happened? I think that shows people feel guilty about something, and I don’t feel guilty about nothing.”

He’s not alone. Players such as Dodgers first baseman Nomar Garciaparra don’t understand why Hancock’s death is being linked to clubhouse drinking, even though baseball seems to be the one major sport that largely turns a blind eye to what is essentially alcohol in the workplace.

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“Honestly, I think it’s a dumb issue to be talking about,” Garciaparra said. “It’s unfortunate what happened to Josh ... but to say that’s the reason why this happened -- it’s not why this happened.”

The Dodgers are one of the teams that still allow a player to sip a beer at his locker after a game. But, like St. Louis and Oakland, the Baltimore Orioles, Chicago Cubs, Colorado Rockies, Florida , Houston Astros, Pittsburgh Pirates, Minnesota Twins, New York Mets, New York Yankees, Toronto Blue Jays and Washington Nationals had bans in place or quickly added them after Hancock was killed.

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