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Fall Classic 2007
Author: TriSec    Date: 10/24/2007 23:03:16

Good Evening!

Well, it looks like the weather is going to hold and we'll be able to get that game in tonight.

Boston is in the unaccustomed position of being the favorite...and it's got some people thinking.

Have we lost our angst?
Life was simpler when we were Idiots.

On its face, this day in Boston, this week, this entire October, couldn't be any better. The Red Sox play in the World Series tonight for the second time in three years. The Patriots are undefeated and seemingly unstoppable. Boston College is ranked number two in America.

"Heaven in New England," yesterday's New York Times declared, in a column in which our mayor bragged about living in a "city of champions." USA Today has proclaimed the Red Sox to be the "biggest attraction in baseball." Fox executives have sore knees from their prayers of thanks that Boston, not Cleveland, has landed in the World Series.

We're rolling sevens everywhere. The perennial bridesmaid is now the odds-on favorite - two-to-one against Colorado, according to the Vegas line. Phones are ringing. Far-flung friends and family members are calling - tell us what it's like, fill us in on the excitement, don't spare a single detail of the city's singular swagger.

So shouldn't it feel better than it does?

The first order of business is to admit it to ourselves: 2004 was more meaningful. Back then, and in the 86 years that preceded it, we knew who we were. We were hapless, though never hopeless. We were the ones that always had something to overcome - a curse, a seemingly in surmountable deficit, a little-brother syndrome.

In the end, until that fabled October, we usually lost, but that was OK. In defeat, we had identity. We got to be the luckless loser. A team, its city, and indeed, an entire national following, thrived on it.

Tom Menino was sitting in his City Hall office yesterday saying what needed to be said. "This is different. In 2004, we never had a taste." He paused, then added, "When you think about Boston, 1 in 3 Bostonians is 20 to 34 years old. You and I know what it's like to lose. They don't."

Which means they don't know about our angst. It was our blanket, our source of comfort, our common bond. If angst were a natural resource, we could have had factories packaging it up 24 hours a day and shipping it to every part of the world.

As it was, we claimed all the angst for ourselves, though the good people of Chicago seemed to have their own supply. Red Sox fans could always blame our misfortunes on New York's payroll, Boston's mismanagement, free agents' unwillingness to come here. It gave us our status as perennial underdogs, the lovable spectacle. We wore that suit, frayed as it sometimes seemed, very comfortably.

Without it, what have we become?

And here's the answer we know but dread: Another free-spending, big market team that buys its way into the postseason with every expectation that it will win.


Continued...



Dan Shaughnessey also has an interesting column today...Dream teams all around

Play Ball!

TIME: 08:00 P.M. EST
VENUE: Fenway Park

Probable Pitchers

Boston: Josh Beckett
http://us.i1.yimg.com/us.yimg.com/i/us/sp/v/mlb/players_l/20070627/6403.jpg?x=65&y=85&xc=1&yc=1&wc=164&hc=215&q=100&sig=BdeVYJentQ_SqpvN28f42A--

20-7, 3.27

Colorado: Jeff Francis
http://us.i1.yimg.com/us.yimg.com/i/us/sp/v/mlb/players_l/20070627/7383.jpg?x=65&y=85&xc=1&yc=1&wc=164&hc=215&q=100&sig=VTcs3eY1_NUBe0R.AT68Sw--

17-9, 4.22

And don't forget to check out the Head to Head Comparison

But I said it before...if teams played the way the looked on paper, sports would be very boring and predictable indeed.


 

43 comments (Latest Comment: 10/25/2007 03:22:21 by livingonli)
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