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Sammy Sofa

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  1. Yes, I know. But someone dying without having seen a WS is moot in terms of my personal experience. That's my point. To me my team not having won it all in 102 years or 35 years is redundant because either way it occurred outside of my lifetime. If they had won it a year before I was born and grandpa got to bask in it, hey, great, good for him; I still haven't been witness to one. From my perspective it's meaningless since the end result is still me without having seen my team win it all. Someone saying "haw-haw, your team hasn't won in 35 years" is the same to me as "haw-haw, your team hasn't won in 102 years." It's just personal perspective. I wouldn't "feel" better about the lifetime of Cubs' crappy baseball that I'VE witnessed if they had won a WS in 1969 or even just a year before I was born. It's not in your personal experience, but witnessing an old man go through his entire life, into old age and dying without seeing one is a lot different than knowing your older brother got to stay up late and watch the WS while you were in Mommy's belly. Wow, great job describing the exceedingly rare experience of a Cubs fan having a Cubs fan grandfather who died without ever seeing them win a WS. Man, yeah, it must be impossible for me to know what that's like and also have the opinion I'm posting about. You're completely and willfully missing the point.
  2. You're nuts. If a cat showed up and they won anyway people would be freaking out? Yes and no. I'm not saying that people would be freaking out only over the cat, just like they weren't freaking out only over the goat in reality. I'm talking about how superstition just adds fuel to the fire. The context would largely still be the same: long-suffering team and fanbase with an epic implosion just 5 outs from the WS, stupid mythology/curse to go along with it. You're talking about a team that would have supposedly shrugged off one "curse" with the stupid goat if they had won in '69, but then not a single lazy sports journalist or announcer wouldn't have picked up on how one of the biggest teams in baseball history hadn't won a WS in decades after the season where they had a black cat run around the on-deck circle? Come on, we'd be hearing that crap left and right, same as the stupid goat. So little would be different in 2003 if they had won in 1969.
  3. Yes, I know. But someone dying without having seen a WS is moot in terms of my personal experience. That's my point. To me my team not having won it all in 102 years or 35 years is redundant because either way it occurred outside of my lifetime. If they had won it a year before I was born and grandpa got to bask in it, hey, great, good for him; I still haven't been witness to one. From my perspective it's meaningless since the end result is still me without having seen my team win it all. Someone saying "haw-haw, your team hasn't won in 35 years" is the same to me as "haw-haw, your team hasn't won in 102 years." It's just personal perspective. I wouldn't "feel" better about the lifetime of Cubs' crappy baseball that I'VE witnessed if they had won a WS in 1969 or even just a year before I was born.
  4. I'm doing nothing of the sort. The fanbase for a team that has existed for well over a century, has always been in one of the country's biggest markets and has had decades of national exposure is obviously going to be significantly different than the fanbase of a team that's not even been around two generations are relegated primarily to a regional fanbase and coverage. It's just common sense that a fanbase as large as the Cubs' have is going to make more noise, literally and figuratively, when their team drops the ball after a hypothetical blown chance to end a 34-year-old WS drought. I can't honestly believe for a second that in my hypothetical scenario, where everything about the Cubs has played out exactly the same before and after 1969 except that they actually won the WS that year, that you think that Cubs fans wouldn't have thrown a similar fit in 2003 as compared to what actually happened? Or that you think the fanbases of the freakin' Padres, Mariners and Astros are in anyway comparable to the fanbase of the Cubs? Again, I'm not talking about reacting to a drought when comparing these fanbases: it's just stupid to compare them in the first place because they're so vastly different. If the Cubs had won 10 WS in the last 20 years the fans' reactions to blowing it in 2003 would still dwarf anything that the fanbases of those other three teams could muster if their team fucked up a chance to win a WS after a decades-long drought. I honestly don't think it would be. Not in any kind of significant way. 34 years is a long time. You've crossed a generation at that point and, again, in my scenario everything else has played out exactly the same post-'69. That's basically 30 years of appallingly bad baseball. I'm confident people would have still flipped out in 2003. Hell, let's say you still had the cat showing up in 1969. Then you just have a new bull [expletive] story about how the Cubs are cursed to never again win another one because of that. Christ, barely anything would be different. People would just be talking up the cat and we'd still be hearing about or seeing Bartman nearly every time they play a nationally broadcast game.
  5. Well, I did not say it wouldn't be a big deal. I'm saying it would not have been nearly as big a deal if they won in '69. 95% of that postseason's discussion was about the 97 year drought. It's simply a much bigger deal than a 33 year drought. Certainly they would talk about the Cubs as a team looking to win for the first time in a very long time. Houston, San Diego, Seattle and others have dealt with similarly long droughts but it has not come close to the discussion of the Cubs at 100. There's a difference, and it is significant. But the difference you're talking about here is with the teams involved, not the drought. I agree there's a difference in the grand scheme of things between 97 and 34 years, but at that moment in 2003 there wouldn't be, or it would be so insignificant that it wouldn't matter, unless you have convinced yourself that as things played out enough fans and players would have told themselves right then and there "ah, this sucks, but hey, at least the Cubs won it all 34 years ago!" Personally, I think once a team has gone 25 years without a championship they've crossed the threshold into "wow, it's been a long ass time since we won it all." And comparing the emotions of the Cubs' fanbase to those other teams with much, much smaller fanbases and whose collective years of existence aren't much older than the Cubs WS drought doesn't really ring all that true. Those are relatively young teams with far fewer fans.
  6. You don't have to be 80. Pitt last won in 1979, you can be in your 30's and have enjoyed that, while generations of Cubs fans have come and gone without one. It's pretty crazy to suggest only 80 year olds know the difference. I'm talking about from the perspective of most of the people on this board in terms of the ages they generally fall under. I'd say with relatively few exceptions most of us fall in the 20-40 range. So let's say that in 1969 the Cubs had actually won the WS. Everything leading up to that is exactly the same as in "real life" everything since then has played out exactly the same as we've known it in "real life." Is anything really "better" in terms of being a Cubs fan born after that compared to not having won a WS in 102 years? Does anyone think that crap like Bartman still wouldn't be obsessed over if the "futility" had been for 34 years instead of 95? About the only difference I could really see is you wouldn't hear anything about the goat because, really, when you get down to it is a 40-year WS drought really any better than 102 years considering most of the fans here wouldn't have been alive? Hell, even if it had been in 1979 like the Pirates, if you were too young to know anything about it or were born after, is it really that much worse? I don't think what I'm suggesting is crazy at all. Personally, it wouldn't make a difference to me if they had won one when I was several months old if I went through the same lifetime of Cubs losing. It would not even be close to what it has been. We'd barely remember Bartman's name if they won it all in '69. You are talking about 2 different things though. 80 year olds and people born in 1979. A 30 year old Pirate fan may not know the difference, but a 40 year old definitely does. A 30 year old Pirates fan and a 30 year old Cubs fan may have dealt with similar frustration, but you don't have to get to 80 year olds before you see the difference. I was clearly talking about two different things. The 80-year-old comment was in regards to the idea of comparing the droughts between the Cubs and the Pirates. To me, it's meaningless since I was essentially not around for either event, so the Pirates having a shorter WS drought doesn't impact me or is "less bad" than the Cubs since in my lifetime the end result has effectively been the same. Personal opinion, that's all. Pointing out the time between when the Cubs last won and the Pirates did seems pretty redundant to me. And I think you're underestimating things by saying 2003 wouldn't have been a big deal if the Cubs had won in '69. If everything else after 1969 had played out EXACTLY the same, you really don't think Cubs fans would be ridiculous over finally almost getting to another WS 33 years later and having blow up in their faces?
  7. You don't have to be 80. Pitt last won in 1979, you can be in your 30's and have enjoyed that, while generations of Cubs fans have come and gone without one. It's pretty crazy to suggest only 80 year olds know the difference. I'm talking about from the perspective of most of the people on this board in terms of the ages they generally fall under. I'd say with relatively few exceptions most of us fall in the 20-40 range. So let's say that in 1969 the Cubs had actually won the WS. Everything leading up to that is exactly the same as in "real life" everything since then has played out exactly the same as we've known it in "real life." Is anything really "better" in terms of being a Cubs fan born after that compared to not having won a WS in 102 years? Does anyone think that crap like Bartman still wouldn't be obsessed over if the "futility" had been for 34 years instead of 95? About the only difference I could really see is you wouldn't hear anything about the goat because, really, when you get down to it is a 40-year WS drought really any better than 102 years considering most of the fans here wouldn't have been alive? Hell, even if it had been in 1979 like the Pirates, if you were too young to know anything about it or were born after, is it really that much worse? I don't think what I'm suggesting is crazy at all. Personally, it wouldn't make a difference to me if they had won one when I was several months old if I went through the same lifetime of Cubs losing.
  8. Unless you're about 80 that really doesn't matter.
  9. Well, it's definitely debatable as to whether or not he's having a better year.
  10. Oh man, if Colvin turns out to be a useful player I'm going to feel so stupid since I really, really want him to suck. I never said you said you wanted him to suck. But you did say it would be a "loooooooooooooooooooooong shot" for him to ever hit 20+ hr over a full year. Which is funny to me since he will do it in his rookie year in somewhat limited ABs. Hey, if I'm wrong I'm wrong.
  11. You're basically criticizing yourself for not being That Guy that you always are. well, at least i beat you to it. Yes, because if I'm known for anything here it's for living by the stupid "everything bad of course will happen to the Cubs" mantra.
  12. Oh man, if Colvin turns out to be a useful player I'm going to feel so stupid since I really, really want him to suck.
  13. You're basically criticizing yourself for not being That Guy that you always are.
  14. http://www.straitpinkie.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/03/font2.jpg http://www.mycubstoday.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/11/chicago-cubs-mike-fontenot2.jpg
  15. Unless you just fell out of a time warp, Fontenot "only playing in occasional spots" would be a generous way to describe his playing time this year.
  16. Badass way to end it with the last two batters. CUBS WIN!
  17. Wow, Marmol is pissed. That was merciless.
  18. This is REALLY [expletive] annoying. Only one actually well hit ball so far this inning.
  19. No kidding. Colvin was there with plenty of time and it should have been an easy catch. He just missed it.
  20. How many veteran teams are you watching on a regular basis?
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