The ultimate homer sometimes lets true feeling show |
Honestly, If a crazed mad man came to me and told me “If the Sox are never able to sneak into first place, I’ll give you fifty grand buuuuuuuuuuuttt If they get hot and get back into the race, I get to punch you in the face repeatedly until you die”, I would have jumped at the opportunity in a heartbeat. I would have pushed down on the red button with all my might and screamed “Deal” at the top of my lungs and laughed my way to the bank. I mean really, why pass up easy money? I was that confident.
Fortunately for the Sox and myself (real me, not hypothetical situation, glass is half empty me), something miraculous and unforeseen happened in Mid-May. The starting rotation began to put together quality start after quality start, which plummeted their team ERA faster than Enron stock circa 2001. Batting averages which were once clustered around the .200 mark became somewhat respectable again. Most important of all, the glove work of Omar Vizquel at third base had a flu-like contagiousness to it as Alexei Ramirez put together the best stretch of defensive play at shortstop in his young career. Even the thought to be severed relationship between Ozzie and Kenny seemed no longer to be an issue. Instead of divorce and separation, winning counseled the White Sox brass to a peaceful reconciliation.
Winning streaks of 11 and 8 games combined to give the south siders a 25 and 5 record in their last 30 games which put them into first place by the all-star-break. Both the team and I couldn’t have been more alive (Real me that is, hypothetical me had been beaten into the afterlife by aforementioned crazed man). Even after the break, we were able to extend our lead in the division over the piranhas of Minneapolis. Instead of watching and wondering how they were going to find a way to lose, my optimism soared as I now thought “when and how are we going to take back the lead from these chumps?” We were now the Alpha Dog, and the once might Twinkies had been reduced to Suzy Q’s. Man… life was good.
Just as I started to get playoff tickets lined up, disaster struck. The bullpen collapsed. Bobby Jenks couldn’t get any outs and found as many new ways to blow a save as Jenna Jameson found to blow something else. JJ Putz (pronounced puts unfortunately), who earlier in the year had put together an incredible streak of scoreless appearances, looked to be the answer to our prayers. Instead, he “Jamesoned” a couple of games and has had many Sox fans questioning the pronunciation of his name. Even the reliable Matt Thornton has looked shaky as of late. I can’t even be happy about the promise of rookie Chris Sale, because the rest of his mates in the pen simply aren’t getting it done.
This brings us to Tuesday in Minnesota. Heading into the series, we (I mean the sox, I hate when fans say we like they have anything to do with it) were three games back in the loss column. Though they had been struggling, I still had reason for optimism. Just a couple months ago, we were 9.5 games back and were able to make that up in no time. Three games is nothing in the grand scheme of a baseball season. We still have a fairly good chance right? Wrong.
Delmon could learn from them |
Wishful thinking on my part because the real defining moment of the season was the walk-off two run homer by former Sox slugger Jim Thome in the bottom that inning. To me, this sealed the Sox fate for good. What could have been a turning point for us (them I mean, God I hate when fans do that) ended up being the exact opposite. Right as Thome hit the ball, I turned off the television immediately, not even wanting to see the final result. I knew the moment the ball left his bat that it was destined for the right field seats. As confident I was in that, I’m even more confident in my assertion that Sox are once in for all, done. I gave up on them before and they surprised me, but this was just too crushing of a blow. I’d bet my life on it…..again.
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