On May 28, 2006, Barry Bonds hit his 715th career home run off Colorado's Byung-Hyun Kim at AT&T Park — passing Babe Ruth for second on baseball's all-time home run list. Only Hank Aaron now stood ahead of him. The home run dropped into McCovey Cove, the customary destination for Bonds blasts. The Giants stadium erupted. Bonds rounded the bases, pointed to the sky, and was greeted at home plate by his son and teammates. The complicated part was everywhere. Bonds had spent the previous five years at the center of MLB's steroid scandal — BALCO indictments, federal investigations, congressional hearings. Most national broadcasters avoided airing the home run live. ESPN's Bonds on Bonds reality show, which had been running all season, was canceled less than a month later. Aaron, watching from Atlanta, declined to comment publicly when Bonds eventually passed him too, on August 7, 2007. The Babe's family said nothing. Major League Baseball declined to make a ceremonial moment of it. Bonds finished his career with 762 home runs — still the official record. Still complicated. Still the most consequential number to land on the list since Aaron passed Ruth in 1974.
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