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Karma killing Cubs and I'm Lovin it!!!!

Discussion in 'Other Sports' started by Bobblehead, Oct 4, 2008.

  1. stipendlax

    stipendlax Member

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    It's okay, Cubbies. There's always next year, or the year after that, or the... well, you get the point.

    Here's to another 100 years.

    Hear hear!
     
  2. moligity

    moligity Member

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    Stupid

    <embed FlashVars='videoId=187570' src='http://www.thedailyshow.com/sitewide/video_player/view/default/swf.jhtml' quality='high' bgcolor='#cccccc' width='332' height='316' name='comedy_central_player' align='middle' allowScriptAccess='always' allownetworking='external' type='application/x-shockwave-flash' pluginspage='http://www.macromedia.com/go/getflashplayer'></embed>
     
  3. MadMax

    MadMax Member

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    "tiger petters"

    [​IMG]
     
  4. Oski2005

    Oski2005 Member

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    I was at Barnes and Noble on Tuesday and I saw a sports illustrated with the Cubs on the cover and this article from Gary Smith about the Cubs and Wrigley Field:

    http://vault.sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1145714/index.htm


    It was a long article, I only skimmed through it, but there was this feeling from the article like "this is the year, it's destiny, it's going to happen, this is the greatest Cubs team ever, etc" that would have really pissed me off if I wasn't reading it after the Cubs were swept out of the first round.
     
  5. Austin70

    Austin70 Member

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    LOSERS

    You would think they would be used to losing all the time that they wouldn't get so mad.



    Sportsline's Ray Ratto says he has been impressed with the way Cubs fans handled last week's sweep at the hands of the Dodgers, keeping the public whining and griping to a minimum.

    The reaction of the actual Cubs players themselves, though, might be a different matter.

    As reported by Rick Telander in today's Chicago Sun-Times, a water pipe in the visitor's dugout at Dodger Stadium was smashed with something near or at the end of Saturday's Game 3. The force was enough to cause the pipe to break and flood the dugout floor. Manager Lou Piniella was prevented from crossing the field to the postgame interview room.

    No one on the Cubs has fessed up, though GM Jim Hendry is reported to have told a Dodgers official to "find out how much it costs and we'll pay for it."

    (I should take the time here to note that this picture to the right is NOT of the Dodger Stadium dugout. Rather, it's an AP file photo from Turner Field during a brutal rain delay in '06. It illustrates the story rather well, don't you think?)

    The whole incident makes for an interesting meditation, writes Telander:

    "Maybe there is nothing all that bad about this incident. After all, no one was hurt, a pipe's a pipe, water evaporates.

    "But there is the smell of cover-up to the thing, and the vandalism is, at the very least, part of perhaps the most bizarre and inexplicable fall from grace in the Cubs' curse-riddled history. Above all, somebody on the team should stand up and say, ''I was the guy.'' Maybe two or more of them should stand up and say they did it. If they did it. Explain their anger, apologize and we'll forgive."

    Telander rightly compares this episode to the hotel-trashing actions of the U.S. hockey team at the '98 Olympics in Japan, embarrassing acts of vandalism to which no one ever fessed up.

    On its own, it's still a strange situation, though. While we Cubs fans wanted to see that the players cared just as much as we did about the downfall, seeing them trash the property of others wasn't the way we wanted to see that passion exhibited.
     

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