I was going to start my own sad sap thread, but Ken already did, so I'll just pile on.
I’ve been watching sports for literally as long as I can remember; my first memory, so far as I can tell, is watching the 1989 NLCS and vaguely knowing what was going on, but knowing that is wasn’t good.
Not much stuck beyond that however. My first really clear sports memory was watching the 1993 (1992 season) Cotton Bowl, where Notre Dame beat Texas A&M. I always think that it’s a little but unfair when kids grow up learning to cheer for dominant teams, like the people my age who claim to have been Yankees, Bulls, and Cowboys fans, but I had a valid excuse with Notre Dame: my grandfather, who was really the only sports fan in my family, was a Notre Dame fan and so I learned to take after him (I have no idea why he was.) I’m pretty sure I watched every game that was televised that year; I know I saw them beat USC and Pittsburgh, although neither game was memorable. I also, of course, remember the Florida State game, the so-called “Game of the Century.” Of course, it was not to be, and Notre Dame lost what I had just assumed was a technicality game against Boston College. Florida State, for some reason, was allowed to play for the national championship. Notre Dame, once again, defeated Texas A&M in the Cotton Bowl, although I don’t remember that one. Notre Dame had some success thereafter, but nothing close to the 1993 season. Since that second Cotton Bowl (January 1st, 1994), they haven’t won another bowl game. I was in 2nd grade during that season. I graduated from college last year.
Baseball hasn’t been better, of course, but it’s even worse when you think about it. The Cubs were promptly swept in the 1998 NLDS against Atlanta, the last time we’d see Kerry Wood fully healthy and dominant until 2003. I needn’t go into that 2003 season much. Everyone predicted the Cubs would win the championship in 2004; they missed the playoffs, losing their top two starters. In the meantime, the following teams won the World Series:
2003: Marlins, who ripped the heart from my body 2004: The Sawx and their legion of annoying fans 2005: White Sox, which meant that the Cubs would forever lose all “bragging” rights. 2006: Cardinals, the most awful franchise on the face of the Earth 2007: The Sawx and their legion of annoying fans
It’s been the same everywhere else as well. The Bears made the playoffs in 1994, beat Minnesota, and then was outclassed by a vastly superior 49ers team. Then, years of Wannstedt-induced suckage until 2001, where the Bears went 11-5, received a bye, and promptly lost to a superior Eagles team. Repeat pattern, replacing Jauron for Wannstedt, and then the Panthers for the Eagles in 2005. Then 2006, the Super Bowl run, the 13-3 season… all ending by getting outclassed by the Colts in the Super Bowl. There’s nothing by mediocrity in sight there.
Even the peripheral sports have sucked, or played their seasons in precisely the correct manner to maximize emotional damage. The Illinois basketball team losing in the 2005 national championship game. Illinois getting curb-stomped by USC in the Rose Bowl last year. Northwestern getting curb-stomped by USC in the Rose Bowl in 1995. Various and multiple losses to the Red Wings and Avalanche back when I cared about hockey. (Before anyone brings up the Bulls, I’ve never cared about the NBA).
And so I think I’ve reached the realization that it’s not the Cubs that are cursed. Sure, they hadn’t had much success before I was born either, but that’s just a coincidence. It’s me who’s cursed. I’m the problem. Every team I have a rooting interest in has alternated between awful and tantalizingly good, only to kill me over and over and over and over again. And that's how it's going to be, until I'm dead.
_________________ Fire Phil Emery
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