Being
A Boston Sports Fan
© 2005 ClickitTicket
Being
a Boston sports fan sometimes reminds me of
battered-wife syndrome. You get beaten down, but
you keep coming back. You’re given just
enough to make you feel warm and fuzzy inside,
just enough to ensure your devotion, but then
you’re inevitably and sorely disappointed.
I don’t know why a woman would ever go back
to a coward who hits her, and I often don’t
know why I remain a Boston sports fan. The Pats,
Celts,
Red
Sox and Bruins
make you want to like them, but it’s sometimes
painful to remain a devoted fan throughout all
their turmoil.
I grew up in a hockey family and my dad was particularly
faithful to the Bruins.
From a very early age I can remember him watching
Bobby Orr and Esposito skate circles around other
teams. By the time I was old enough to actually
understand what was going on, the Bruins were
comprised of some more awesome players like Middleton,
O'Reilly, Pederson, and Milbury. I used to love
to watch Boston play Montreal
with my father, but it seemed like Boston lost
a lot more than won.
It was great to see Terry O'Reilly beat the heck
out of other players, and it was cool to watch
all these veterans a few years later skate around
without helmets while the rest of the players
had to wear them. I guess it was some sort of
grandfather clause or something. They just looked
tough. When Cam Neely and Ray Bourque started
playing I enjoyed the Bruins
just as much. But after Orr and Esposito were
gone, none of these more recent players won the
Boston
Bruins a Stanley
Cup, quite frustrating.
But not to fear, the Boston
Celtics around this time were hot. Like the
Bruins/Canadians, the Celtics/Lakers rivalry was
a blast to experience, especially when the Celts
won. And they did. I remember probably one of
the greatest NBA teams ever to exist, Bird, McHale,
Parish, DJ and Ainge. They weren’t the prettiest
bunch of guys around, Bird being particularly
funky looking, but they were so fun to watch.
It was wonderful to see them beat the L.A. Lakers
in the 1983-84 championship and the Houston Rockets
in 1985-86 championship.
Unfortunately the last few Celtics’ seasons
lately have been dismal. They don’t even
make it to the playoffs regularly any more. How
many more “building years” do we need?
Watching Pierce take off his shirt and wave it
around his head while being ejected from one of
the playoff games against the Pacers this year
was sad.
But 1986 was the end of Boston championship teams
for a long while. In fact, it was sixteen years
until the Patriots finally won Super Bowl XXXVI
in 2002. That’s a long wait. That’s
a lifetime for crying out loud.
The New
England Patriots were another difficult team
to watch and remain devoted to. Grogan was a decent
quarterback and many would argue Drew Bledsoe
was even better, but they never brought a championship
home. Watching Drew throw numerous interceptions
and trudge off the grid iron with hunched shoulders
was disturbing. I like to think of Bledsoe as
an ‘almost’ kind of player. He was
almost awesome, was almost a championship quarterback.
He almost won the game. Bledsoe actually drove
me crazy. He was New
England’s franchise player, but he just
didn’t seem to ever do quite enough to win.
It was so frustrating to watch him play. All big
and gawky, shuffling out of the pocket like my
nana.
But the tide turned. Third string quarterback
Tom Brady took the place of an injured Bledsoe,
and brought the championship home to Bostonians.
The 2002 NFL playoffs were absolutely awesome
to watch if you were a Boston sports fan. Watching
Vinatieri blast it though the uprights in a blizzard
to beat the Oakland
Raiders, and again to win the Super
Bowl beating the St.
Louis Rams was monumental. Thank God for the
Pats.
They brought respect back to Boston. They showed
what true grit is, what the word “team”
actually means, in a day when everything in sports
seems to be centered on individual feats. I loved
it when they ran out on the field together as
a team instead of being introduced one at a time
at the beginning of the Super Bowl.
Pathetically enough, most people thought the
Pats would not win it all again. They thought
it was a fluke. The Pats had lost for so long
that few had faith in them. But they won it again
two years later and people started to pay attention.
The word “dynasty” crept up in New
England vernacular. When the Pats won their third
Super Bowl in four years, they were finally accepted
as a dynasty. These wins will carry me for many
years. Again, thank God for the Pats.
But no good article about being a Boston sports
fan can be complete without discussing the Boston
Red Sox. What can be said about the Sox?
They were the epitome of frustration. They were
the Bad News Bears for so long. Of all the Boston
teams, they were the most painful to watch. They
often had the talent, they often played well,
but they didn’t win a World Series for 86
years! Between the ball rolling between the knees
of Bill Buckner, and Grady keeping Pedro in against
the Yankees
during the 2003 playoffs, every Sox fan was pushed
to the limit of what they could endure. Of course
there were many other less notable, but just as
frustrating moments in Red
Sox history. Any Red
Sox fan who remained a fan throughout should
be given a gift.
And what a sweet gift it was when the Sox
won the 2004 World
Series. Being down 3-0 in the ALCS against
the Yankees,
and then coming back to beat them and sweep the
Cardinals
in the World Series was one of the greatest professional
sports stories in history. In fact, it’s
been called one of the greatest comebacks ever.
All those long years of no championships in Boston
finally came to end with the Pats winning in 2002.
But after 86 years of no World Series rings, the
Red
Sox win was the sweetest of all. 2004 was
one of the greatest years in Boston sports ever.
A World
Series and Super
Bowl win by Boston
teams in the same year, almost unbelievable.
So I guess being a Boston sports fan is not so
much like battered-wife syndrome. It’s more
like being in a difficult marriage that has lots
of ups and downs only, but is worth working at
to keep. Being a Boston sports fan is as frustrating
as it is rewarding. Patience, loyalty, persistence,
and faith will get you through. And in the end,
it all works out. Just keep the faith.
© 2005 ClickitTicket
By Jason OConnor
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