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. You are talking out of both sides of your mouth here. 33 is either the same as 97 or it is not. What does a 30 year old care if his team has only been in existence for 40 years? Had the Cubs won in 1969 the reaction in 2003 and current feelings about 2003 would be different. I don't see how anybody can think otherwise. Once you are past 25 year it's been a long time, sure. But 100 is a hell of a lot longer.