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The passion for sports in America and addresses the famous Curse of the Bambino and the Billy Goat Curse.



The Curse of the Sports Fan
There's Nothing Like the Passion of Americans & Sports


Sox fans were happy while it lasted – until the 7th inning.

 For The Red Sox, the Curse is Reversed

 Fenway Park "Ballparks and Beer"

Imagine, if you will, a grown man shedding tears, crying his eyes out, his wounded heart open to the world.

A caring, sensitive, gentleman sharing an emotional moment with his girlfriend? No, an American Sports Fan whose team has just lost a big game or a championship.

There is absolutely nothing – I mean nothing – that can envelop the emotions of people like sports in America.

Fans lean on their teams to provide thrills in their lives, to be able to forget the bossy boss for a moment or take the chill out of, say, a harsh Northeastern winter. There is the home team and every one of them has a hated opponent – a rival – that makes a fan's blood curdle at the mere mention of the name. They wear their team's colors and logos as standard wardrobe and pack sports bars when they can't be at the game themselves. These sports bars take on a character all their own, almost expanding and contracting with each fans' heavy breath.

Oh sure, there are soccer nuts in Europe and they go especially bonkers in Brazil. Latinos cheer madly for their countrymen in any endeavor with such passion it inspires admiration.

But they do this for their teams or heros whether they win, lose or just perform well. For Americans it's all about the win.

This is a country where second place does not count, where being the runner-up is actually far worse than finishing dead last. They took us this far, only to let us down at the end!

I bring this up because I just finished watching the Boston Red Sox in the 2004 baseball playoffs. Did it not in Fenway or even in Beantown, but at a couple of Bosox-dominated sports bars in Los Angeles. It felt like being in Fenway Park, with all the jerseys, hats and New England accents. Had I located a Chicago-only bar in town, I would have been there for the Cubbies, as well.

Why the Red Sox and Cubs? Because these are two of the world's most interesting teams with the most die-hard of fans. And I do mean Die Hard. Being in their presence - with ever-present beer in hand, of course – it's possible to actually feel their passion, to be like a voodoo doll that can enjoy their triumphs and agonize over their misfortunes.

They cheer even on foul balls hit by their hitters and moan at every non-strike pitched by their pitchers. They sit so silently on big plays it's possible to hear their hearts pounding in unison and become so loud on things as simple as a fly ball it rattles the eardrums. They are never happy, can never relax and are always prepared for the worst to happen because, well, the worst always happens.

Until the Red Sox broke through and did the improbable in 2004, neither team had won a World Series since World War I. The Red Sox have had a shortstop hold onto the ball too long while the winning run crossed home plate, let a ball roll though the legs of a first basman, twice allowed light-hitting Yankee infielders to scorch them with series-deciding dingers and blown more leads than the Denver Police Dept. The Cubs have made an art form of melting down in the clutch (often missing the playoffs entirely) and, most recently, had an irresponsible fan knock a sure out away from the left fielder and just as surely knock them right out of the World Series.

And then there are "the curses."

For Boston, it's "The Curse of the Bambino," the price for selling Babe Ruth to the Yankees back in 1920. For Chicago, it has to do with a billy goat.

Now, there may be something to these curses but I believe it has more to do with attitude than any hex that has some Red Sox fans scuba diving in a pond looking for Babe Ruth's piano.

That's right, attitude. It's all negative. There's not a positive thought in the house.

Games are not calculated by going forward through the innings, but backward by how many outs are left until it's over. "We're 12 outs away," they'll say. And, no matter the score, no matter the lead, no matter the dominance of their ace pitcher on the mound, once the game reaches the seventh inning, they fear it's all over. "They'll give up a solo home run to lose it, I just know it," they say. Sure enough, the team gives up a solo home run and loses. (Note: The Sox fans seems to stunned by their '04 comeback against the Yankees that their typical pessimism didn't have the chance to take hold. As a result, they won it all).

It's a strange concept for me. Then again, my favorite team is one that actually wins big games (recent seasons notwithsanding). The University of Alabama is one of college football's most dominant programs and historically, when it's crunch time, that's when it does the most crunching. The school has won 12 national championships (and I have no idea how many league titles beacause in our minds the Big Prize is the only one that counts) and when the game is close we confidently know we are going to win. No doubts, no questions, no curses. Negative vibes lead to negative results. Positive vibes lead to positive results.

So, is there really a curse? Well, all the positive vibes in the world can't keep a manager from brain-freezing in the late innings – failing to remove Bill Buckner, leaving Pedro Martinez or Kerry Wood in too long – but giving out positive vibes instead of negative ones can definitely help prevent a sure-handed shortstop from making an eighth-inning error or having no-names like Bucky Dent and Aaron Boone become part of baseball lore.

Try it sometime. It just might work. Cubbies, it's your turn now. And while you're at it, pass me a beer.

The Bartender can be reached at bartender@pubclub.com

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