Roger Angell, from today's Sporting Scene blog:
Today my shriveled, Old Giants Fan cortex is suffused with happy thoughts for this young, freshly crowned World Championship edition of my old nine, which beat up on the Texas Rangers in the now concluded Series, winning four out of five games, and allowing them but a single run (and a single base-runner past second) over their last twenty-one innings. Two of the young, homegrown Giants starters, Matt Cain and Madison Bumgarner, didn’t allow a run, and the third, the eccentric and delightful Tim Lincecum, out-pitched his celebrated (and far wealthier) opposite number, Cliff Lee, in the 3-1 finale last night. This was the Giants’ first World Series win since 1954, when they played uptown from me at the Polo Grounds, and my glowing thoughts just now extend toward a slew of variously talented, fervent but disappointed heroes of mine who strove mightily in the years since then without ever waking up to this sort of morning: Orlando Cepeda, Willie McCovey, John (the Count) Montefusco, Atlee Hammaker, Will Clark (whose eloquent swing, seen in time-frame sequence, is up on a bulletin board in my study), Jeff Leonard (whose home-run trot sometimes featured a broken-wing effect, left or right, to show up the pitcher); and a particular pal, the late Bill Rigney, a one-time Giants utility infielder who went on to manage the club (and two others) for a total of six years but never took them to the home port of October.
Outpitched, outhit, and outmanaged, the powerful Rangers, who had easily dismissed the Yankees in the A.L.C.S., took an ugly sort of beating—a mugging—in these games, and it will take a while to figure out why. Their players, dispersing now toward their families and golf courses and hunting pastures, will be bad company for the next few weeks. This took away their pride, and they won’t recover it until they can bat and throw again in March and April, and resume the chancy, everyday winning and losing that comes with their trade. No such relief is available to their fans, who were exulting in their team’s first World Series in its fifty-year history, and now have only their ticket stubs and dorky outsize Ranger hats to show for it. I’m no hankie-waver, but I believe that we victory-stuffed Yankees fans or recently enriched Red Sox Nation loonies have little notion of this deep local pain, nor quite remember the quivering first joys of giving ourselves to the hopeless early Mets. Even in Dallas, sudden losing, catastrophe at the very end, is the price of caring, and remission comes slowly. We old baseball-capital types secretly patronize these dispersed Dallas hordes, I sense, but what owe them right now is a dab of pity.
Players have little awareness of fan angst, but I’ve not forgotten an amazing late-summer conversation I had with the iconic, forty-year-old Willie McCovey at Candlestick Park, in 1978, at a time when his contending Giants had just dropped five out of six games and were beginning a customary September slide toward oblivion.
“The fans sitting up there are helpless,” he said. “They can’t pick up a bat and come down and do something. Their only involvement is in how well you do. If you strike out or mess up out there, they feel they’ve done something wrong. You’re all they’ve got. The professional athlete knows there’s always another game or another year coming up. If he loses he swallows that bitter pill and comes back. It’s much harder for the fans.” |
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