This post originally appeared at the Fort Worth Weekly's website. To view it there : http://www.fwweekly.com/2016/10/26/sports-rush-which-baseball-curse-is-worse/
There will be joy in Mudville. Either the Chicago Cubs or the Cleveland Indians will win the World Series this season.
I have a t-shirt that reads “World Champions, 1908, Chicago Cubs.”
It’s theoretically funny because that was the last time the franchise
took home the title. They haven’t played in a Fall Classic since 1945,
where they lost to the Detroit Tigers. Cleveland finished 11 games back
that year, but three years later won their most recent world’s
championship.
Both teams have come close since those postwar days, but a merciless
collusion of Cinderellas, overzealous fans, and goat owners has
conspired to deny them the prize. No Ernie Banks, Jim Thome, or Milton
Bradley could seem to push them through.
Each franchise has changed its fate in part by adding components from
a club that previously occupied a “haven’t won since before there was
TV” slot. Theo Epstein and Jon Lester went from the Red Sox to the Cubs.
Terry Francona and Mike Napoli left the Bostonians for Lake Erie’s
shores.
Both clubs’ woes have immortalized them in pop culture. The Cubbies
had WGN-TV’s national reach and Harry Caray’s thunderous personality.
The Indians had Rick Vaughn, Willie Mays Hays, and the movie Major
League. Both vehicles served to engender widespread sympathy for the
teams’ desperate but loyal fans.
I wouldn’t argue they don’t deserve the support. My father grew up
going to games in Wrigley Field and I’d love for him to see them win a
Series in his lifetime. His brothers passed away in their eighties
having never gotten to see the spectacle.
Do Cubs and Indians fans deserve it more, however, than, say, the
fans of a team who has never won? Pretty much all clubs have had some
form of heartbreak, and it’s tough to rank a Nelson Cruz moment over
that of a Steve Bartman or a Jose Mesa. Hey, I’ve at least got a 1908
World Champs shirt. I can only get a Rangers equivalent by buying it off
a kid in some faraway obscure country.
Eight MLB teams have never won a title : Seattle (Pilots)/Milwaukee,
Houston, Washington/Texas, Seattle (Mariners), San Diego,
Montreal/Washington, Tampa, and Colorado. The two oldest, the
Texas-based teams, entered the Majors in 1961. Montreal/Washington and
Seattle (Mariners) have never even participated in a World Series.
Milwaukee and Washington are somewhat special cases because previous
franchises based in those cities won titles (in 1957 and 1924,
respectively) before they moved.
The math indicates at least one team will always be at least 30 years
between titles (the Mets, for instance, were the 1986 winners and
haven’t lifted the trophy since). How long would they have to go before
they would belong in the same sympathy stratosphere as the
winless-since-their-1977-inception Mariners?
One reason many have ranked the Cubs at the top of the commiseration list has been the loyal support of its fans. For the last 30+
years, they have regularly filled Wrigley even when the players
underperformed on the diamond. Cleveland had some strongly attended
seasons, too, but its fans’ affinity hasn’t proven as consistent as the
loyalty shown in Wrigleyville. Of the never-wons, the Rockies have led MLB in attendance five times and the Mariners twice. The Rangers
came close off a World Series appearance and the Astros finished second
when they opened the Astrodome, but for the most part these teams have
not threatened to win the fan loyalty battle either.
Should we add overall sports droughts
to our compassion calculations? Cleveland’s basketball team just ended
their city’s, which dated to 1964. Chicagoans have had the Blackhawks,
and the Seahawks, Mavericks, Lightning, Broncos, and Dynamo have
provided non-baseball sports celebrations over the last couple of
decades for some cities on the list. San Diego and Milwaukee have waited
53 and 45 years, respectively, for a parade.
So for whom should a neutral fan cheer hardest? Maybe take a page
from my brother-in-law. He comes from Bulgaria and has no traditional
baseball loyalties. At the beginning of each season, he adopts a team
picked to finish near the bottom. If they do better than expected, Alex
can be happy. If they finish where predicted, there’s no disappointment.
Choose any team on this list and if a World Series title arrives in due
course, you’ll be happy. If not, it’s just what you’re used to anyway.
This week, though, you can cheer for the Cubs or the Indians. Enjoy a
historic World Series. And maybe next year will be the year the Rangers
lay to rest whatever curse has landed them in the same column with the
1908 titlists.
Rush Olson has spent two decades directing creative efforts for
sports teams and broadcasters. He currently creates ad campaigns,
television programs, and related creative projects for sports entities
through Rush Olson Creative & Sports and FourNine Productions.
RushOlson.com
Linkedin.com/company/rush-olson-creative-&-sports
Facebook.com/RushOlsonCreativeandSports
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