The Tigers dropped the last two
MLB 21 Stubs games of McLain's season, either by scores of 1-2. After the show, McLain stated to the media:"I wouldn't exchange one Bob Gibson for twelve Mickey Loliches. "He was featured on the front cover of TIME magazine in 1968. McLain was also a frequent guest on talk shows and played with Vegas performances as an organist, adding to his already-ridiculous major-league salary, and became the richest, and most famous, man in baseball.
In February 1970, Sports Illustrated published a story on McLain's involvement with bookmaking and sports betting in affiliation with the Allied mob. They declared that his foot injury that ended the Tigers' season in 1967 was actually a member of the cop that stomped on McLain's foot as punishment for not paying off debts. He maintained to commissioner Bowie Kuhn he had not done any gaming himself, but spent $15,000 from the bookmaking business.McLain drank a case of Pepsi every afternoon, even drinking them involving innings.After his Pepsi dependence became public, a Pepsi representative met with McLain to work out an endorsement together with the company. He and the agent realized they shared an affinity for gaming, then set up their own bookmaking operation as partners.
Commissioner Bowie Kuhn suspended McLain prior to the 1970 time to conduct an investigation into his gambling, keeping him out of action until July, when Kuhn cleared McLain of any wrongdoing, saying he'd become a victim of a confidence scheme.McLain had a yearly income of roughly $200,000, and entrusted his money to a lawyer who subsequently lent it and fled to Japan. McLain subsequently filed for bankruptcy, listing his debts at $446,069 along with his assets at $413. Two months following his reinstating, McLain was again suspended for one week after dousing two sportswriters with
Buy MLB The Show 21 Stubs ice water. He claimed that it was a harmless prank.
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