McGwire broke Roger Maris' home run record in 1998 with 70 dingers
The summer of 1998 was a pretty good time to be a baseball fan.
Mark McGwire and Sammy Sosa were slugging home runs at a historic rate, the New York Yankees were closing in on a 114-win season and the Arizona Diamondbacks and Tampa Bay Devil Rays were embarking on their first seasons. Baseball was hot.
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Mark McGwire, #25 of the St. Louis Cardinals, acknowledges the fans after hitting his 70th home run of the season during a game against the Montreal Expos at the Busch Stadium in St. Louis. (Getty Images)
However, the floodgates burst open years later when McGwire, Sosa, and later Barry Bonds, were engulfed in a steroids scandal. Now, the records they set are considered to be tainted by some or come with an asterisk by others. All three players fell off the Hall of Fame ballot with their only way in now is through the Contemporary Baseball Era Committee.
On the outside looking in at Cooperstown, the former St. Louis Cardinals and Oakland Athletics slugger appeared on "Legends Territory" on Wednesday. Host A.J. Pierzynski asked if the group of people who were engulfed in the scandal were being unfairly punished.
"It seems like it. That’s what it is," McGwire said. "I think I heard Barry say it the other day. There was no rules, there was no regulations. Believe me, trust me, if there was any rules in place, that stuff would’ve never happened. There was no testing. There no nothing.
Mark McGwire bats against the Houston Astros at Busch Stadium on Sept. 23, 1998 in St. Louis. (Sporting News via Getty Images via Getty Images)
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"And I agree with what Barry was saying. That was the culture. That’s what was going on back in those days and whatever. I can personally tell you, for me, listen, I didn’t need to do it and I apologize for it. But there was a lot of f---ing hard work that went behind all the s--- people want to give me to do what I did."
Bonds, the all-time MLB home run leader, said last month he believed he should be in the Hall of Fame too.
"Sure, it bothers you. But at the same time, I also know who I am," he said on the "Hollywood Swingin' with Stephen Bishop and Jerry Hairston Jr." podcast. "And the thing is that people have to understand ... I was vindicated. I went to the court, I was in federal court, and I won my case, 100%.
Barry Bonds hit it twice out of the ballpark during the game in 2001. (LIZ HAFALIA/The San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images)
"Where is the vindication of me in my own sport? That's what bothers me."
Ryan Gaydos is a senior editor for Fox News Digital.