Saturday, June 16, 2012

Nothing to Fight For


Here are a few Sox thoughts for my first sports post in a while. The Sox-Yankees rivalry has been huge in sports, it gave you something to cheer for, an underdog to root for. When the Rays soared a few years ago it added something new to the mix. Then the O’s sunk the Sox last year… wait a minute that’s three teams, that isn’t a rivalry that’s just the Sox underperforming. The rivalry is dead because now every team is a rival. The Sox have become that bad, it’s not them and the Yankees duking it out atop the standings. It’s not the joes versus the pros; it’s not David and Goliath. The Sox have sunk so far that they fight and claw to a .500 record while the other teams continue to rise above them. I don’t think the problem with the Sox is simply that they are entitled, overpaid, or uninspiring. It’s that there is no opponent, no story line, nothing to fight for. In 2004 we trumped the Yankees in the ALCS and plowed to a WS victory. In 2007 the Yankees didn’t make the playoffs (proving once again we are the better team) and we bounced back in the ALCS en route to another WS victory (including a game 4 win by a young Jon Lester and fantastic performance by an old friend by the name of Mike Lowell). Now, well we’ve got a scrap heap of overpaid players who have no reason to fight other than to appease a rabid fan base. Winning requires more than talent, it demands the desire to win, to prove something. These Sox have nothing to prove other than that they are any worse than last year. Well at 32-34 they aren’t close to as bad as the 7-20 team last September, but that’s not an accomplishment.

2 comments:

Tyler Maher said...

The Yankees did make the playoffs in 2007; the Indians beat them in the ALDS.

Tay Tay said...

You are exactly right on that, I realized that I mistyped, they made the Wild Card while the Sox won the division. I remember watching the Indians series alongside the Sox hoping the Yankees would lose thinking they'd be easier to beat.