It took Major League Baseball Commissioner Bud Selig longer to respond to Alex Rodriguez's admission that he had taken steroids than it did for A-Rod to come forward after the allegations surfaced—and Selig didn't even have to rush back from canoodling in the Bahamas (we hope). Selig released a statement today saying, "What Alex did was wrong and he will have to live with the damage he has done to his name and reputation." In an interview with USA Today, Selig also hinted at his possible desire to suspend A-Rod (despite having no grounds to do so) as well as reinstating Hank Aaron as the home run record holder because of the steroid scandal (only to have an MLB rep quickly take that idea off the table). While many have pointed the figure to baseball's lax role as a factor in the course of the scandal, Selig chose to focus on the fact that A-Rod had not taken steroids since the MLB's anti-doping policy went into effect in 2004 and pointed the finger at the Players' Union saying that the formation of said policy "received no cooperation from the Players Assn. and virtually none from the players."