W_Z wrote:
Tall Midget wrote:
Again, the Cubs mistakes indicate that they weren't all that great. They imploded whereas the Marlins did not. But again, if anybody could've beaten the Cubs, then they couldn't have been very good, correct? How can you say both that they're better than the Marlins and they're so bad that they would've lost to anyone? Your argument makes no sense and your earlier implication that I am a liar is pathetic.
I said you were a liar? Gee, TM I am sorry for that. Could you put more words into my mouth? The Cubs didn't just implode in 2003. They've had a history of doing so. But to say that the Marlins, down 3 games to 2, with only 5 outs left, and being dominated until the 8th inning, were the better team--well, that's the stuff of legend. The Cubs turn a routine play into a disaster.
Would you say the Mets were the better team than the Red Sox in '86 prior to what happened in game 6? Buckner must have just been dominated by a superior ground ball I guess.
Again, the Cubs made huge mistakes and the Marlins, with the same opportunities to do so, didn't. And baseball games are nine innings, not seven. You seem unwilling to accept the rules of baseball. The idea that there were only "Five outs left" in game six is one of the biggest jokes in the history of baseball fandom. It's as if Cubdom believes that the Marlins were obligated to surrender, that they had no ability or desire to win.
As for your point about the 86 series, I am lost. I didn't watch it so I'm not sure what your argument is. If you're saying that poor fielding at a key moment shouldn't count against the perception of the Red Sox's championship timbre, though, I again disagree. Fielding is part of the game. If you can't do it as well as the other team, there's a pretty good chance you're not as good as they are.
As for your claim that you didn't imply I was a liar, I think it's pretty clear what the meaning of this quote is:
Quote:
Fine. It's too bad we didn't have this web site back then so you could prove that. I will believe you,
Did you even listen to sports radio back in 2003? If you had, you'd know that my views about the Cubs and Baker were hardly anomalous among Score callers.
_________________
Antonio Gramsci wrote:
The crisis consists precisely in the fact that the old is dying and the new cannot be born; in this interregnum a great variety of morbid symptoms appear.