Curious Hair wrote:
I suppose Farnsworth was another white target of hate.
But take Derrek Lee. No, he was never hated, certainly not on the LaTroy Hawkins level, but I don't think he was ever truly loved, either, nor will he go on to be loved, despite being a big part of why any of those mid-2000s Cubs teams (other than 2003) were any good. And I think a lot of it was that he just never saw fit to ingratiate himself with the fanbase, to smile and wave and call us the best. He didn't think North Side baseball fans were special. In fact, he didn't even seem to like them at all. He went on the record to agree with Obama's dopey-ass everyman posturing about how Cubs fans suck because it was more important to stand with the black guy than to stand with his team. He played the game really well (except for grounding into double plays every game), but didn't particularly care where he played it. I'm sure tons of pretty good white guys have come and gone with no particular affinity for the whole Cubs thing, but they don't stand out for it. Derrek Lee does, because every black guy has to be measured against Ernie, however subconsciously.
You mention Sosa. Let's flip him with Frank Thomas. Sosa's act would be a hit anywhere. Do you think Cubs fans would have taken to Hurt the same way?
I don't know. Frank was aloof. He probably could have owned Chicago to an almost Ditka-like degree if his personality had been different. But it's hard to hate a guy who performed for your team the way he did.
And I agree with you about the collective subconscious comparing Lee to Ernie. Laurence isn't completely off-base when he says "it has a lot to do with race". And race and class are inextricably linked in this country. We have our history. There is a difference between thousands of privileged white kids yelling pejoratives at a guy who looks like them as opposed to yelling them at Milton Bradley.
I don't think a guy like Mike North even knows he's being racist when he calls a guy like Bradley "militant." And that gets back to what bothered me about bernstein's column on Rose. I believe the headline was something like, "Bernstein: Rose No Longer Humble, Hometown Kid". Why must Rose be humble? He's one of the best basketball players in the world and quite wealthy. Does bernstein also expect humility from rich Jewish guys?