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Sox vs. Cubs: Who deserves to win?
GROUP
DISCUSSION
October 7, 2003
 Stephan
Finch: I grew up a fan of the Red Sox, though
they broke my heart in 1978. No 11-year-old who faithfully
spends every goddam afternoon after school watching his
heroes, Butch Hobson, Fred Lynn, Bernie Carbo, George
"Booomer" Scott, Jim Rice, Carl Yastrzemski,
and even that .209 hitting Denny Doyle squander a 14-game
lead at the break. No 11-year-old should suffer the pain
of watching Bucky Dent... Bucky FUCKING Dent... send one
over the green monster.
Where was I? Oh yeah, a Red Sox fan. But I lived in New
York and, Mother Mary and Fred Lynn forgive me, fell in
love with Yankees in 1996. Something about that incredible
comeback against the Braves, I guess. And, for Chrissakes,
is it so bad to cheer for a team that can actually win?
A little salve on my wounded 11-year-old's broken dreams?
Never mind that I was too ashamed to cry when the Diamondbacks
broke us in 2001. Because I'd had those two magic nights
in games 5 and 6. Yank-ees, Yank-ees, Yank-ees, I whispered
in my sleep.
Oh, but it doesn't stop there. Oh, no. The self-destructive
heroin addict always has to go back to the pipe, no matter
the consequences, and the romantic always goes back to
cheering for *sigh* the hopeless underdog. And
wouldn't you know it, I live in Chicago now. Home of the
only team in baseball that Red Sox fans can actually have
a measure of pity on. Da Cubs. People in Chicago are so
resigned to watching this team lose, they sell out Wrigley
with total disregard to how far back in the standings
the Cubs are. These fans like to lose. Wrigley is a dump,
and still they come. And, God help me, I'm hooked. Cub-bies,
Cub-bies, Cub-bies...
Any one of these teams makes it to the Series, I'm in
like Lynn. (That's as in Fred Lynn. Fred, after all these
years, I forgive you, babe.) At least, I should be. That
is, as long as I can contain my darkest, most self-destructive
hope: Pedro v. Kerry in game one.
Oh, god. I'm a junkie. A JUNKIE!
David
Brown: The true curse of the Red Sox is that
even if they were to break through and finally win it
all, Red Sox Nation as we know it would collapse. The
Curse is so woven into the fabric of Boston and New England
that any disruption of Sox ineptitude would send the whole
region into a tailspin of confusion, self-doubt, and soul-searching
(albeit after a wicked-huge parade).
Sox fans are defined by their unending agony – coming
too close only to suffer bitter defeat. It gives them
character and bestows upon the franchise a romanticism
that no team can match. Check out HBO's documentary, "The
Curse of the Babe." If this was really the year,
and they really did win it, what would all those Sawx
fans do next? No more complaining, no more self-loathing,
pity, angst, anguish, doom or gloom. The whole mystique
that has been slowing building since 1919 will dissipate
like 3 game lead in July. For Christ's sake, Dan Shaughnessy's
head would probably explode.
The Cubs are faced with no such curse. They are just the
lovable losers. They could handle victory much easier.
But for the sake of tranquility, let's all root for another
Yankee victory. We're at war, the economy blows, Arnold
will soon be governor. The Yankees could provide some
much needed stability on the home-front. Go Yanks!
Brandon
Copple: It is different being a Cubs fan. You
can’t become a real Cubs fan just by moving to Chicago
and getting hammered at Wrigley a few dozen times (believe
me). Like the Red Sox, the Cubs have lots of followers,
but to be a real Cubs fan you have to have suffered.
But the suffering of Red Sox fans is a so-close kind of
suffering, born of bucky homers, booted grounders and
many a September collapse.
The Cubs have had a couple of epic meltdowns, but the
essence of their fans’ misery is not in repeated
dramatic disaster, but in decades-long losing streaks.
The Cubs go five years between playoffs, twenty years
between playoff wins, sixty years between World Series
and of course, a century between championships. And yet
people keep coming back. Every spring, hope springs eternal
along with the ivy on the outfield wall. It’s either
a miracle or a disease.
I’ve lived in Chicago, always within a few miles
of Wrigley, for five years, but I only gave myself over
to the Cubs two years ago; and I won’t feel like
I’m a real Cubs fan until I’ve stuck with
them through back-to-back-to-back-to-back-to-etc losing
seasons. Until then, I’m just another yuppie jerk
basking in the glory of Wrigley Field, like a Baptist
sitting in on mass at Notre Dame.
Michael
Walls: I’ve suddenly come to a realization
that wishing for a Cubs-Red Sox World Series is like wishing
for Armageddon. For over a century, baseball has been
built upon several stabilizing blocks that makes it what
it is: the most exciting and heartbreaking game in the
world. What makes it so exciting is the fierce team competitiveness
and the pure individualistic heroics. What makes it so
heartbreaking is the existence of evil empires (the Yankees
and the Braves), and the endless, hopeful quest for redemption
by the Boston Red Sox and the Chicago Cubs.
These are the cornerstones of Baseball. Just like the
Russians and the Berlin Wall were the cornerstones of
the Cold War. Remember the Cold War? The war were everyone
was afraid, but no one really got hurt? We all wished
for an end to communism. Then, when our wish came true,
and the Soviet Union turned to Democracy, and the Berlin
Wall came tumbling down – what was there left to
wish for?
If the Cubs and Red Sox go to the World Series, they both
can’t win. One will walk away victorious, thus wiping
the wish slate clean, while the other will go back home
to a completely devastated city that will require national
guardsmen and years of therapy to upright.
Dave Brown was right about the Red Sox. Boston is built
upon the failures of the Red Sox. If the Sox should win,
nirvana will have been reached, and there will be nothing
to complain about. Boston would crumble under the boredom
and it’s citizens would wander around aimlessly
like zombies. If they should lose, Boston will burn to
the ground, following by that same aimless wandering.
Is this what we want from baseball? To finally reach those
collective wishes of a righteous world where everyone
is a winner? Where no one is a loser? Where no one is
left out? Where everyone gets to be happy?
That would suck.
The only true way to save baseball is to watch the Yankees
bitch-slap the Marlins in a four game sweep. This way,
we always have next year.
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