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The Appreciator - Welcome to the World of Matt
Home
Appreciations
    Why The Appreciator?
    Collected Wisdom
    Media Reccomendations
    Soul Fillers
    Reuben R. Reuben loves Reubens
Matt’s Satisfying Expressions
    Personal
    Originals
Sports Writings
    Baseball
    Cubs 2016 Season
    Things Less Important Than Baseball
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Music Writings
    On Musical Intake
    On Musical Output
    Hot Stove, Cool Music
Tributosaurus
    Official Site/Schedule
    Press
    Videos
Good Comp, Bad Comp
Introducing “Our Game”
About Matt
Further The Conversation
    Contact Matt
  • Home
  • Appreciations
    • Why The Appreciator?
    • Collected Wisdom
    • Media Reccomendations
    • Soul Fillers
    • Reuben R. Reuben loves Reubens
  • Matt’s Satisfying Expressions
    • Personal
    • Originals
  • Sports Writings
    • Baseball
    • Cubs 2016 Season
    • Things Less Important Than Baseball
    • Radio
  • Music Writings
    • On Musical Intake
    • On Musical Output
    • Hot Stove, Cool Music
  • Tributosaurus
    • Official Site/Schedule
    • Press
    • Videos
  • Good Comp, Bad Comp
  • Introducing “Our Game”
  • About Matt
  • Further The Conversation
    • Contact Matt
Appreciations, Baseball, Matt’s Satisfying Expressions, Sports Writings, Top sidebar left slider

You Made It To The Show

You are never, ever done growing. You’re never finished learning. If you’re lucky.

You’ve been on or near the air in Chicago since fall 1994, when a long haired singer in a 10 piece funk band was given the opportunity to intern at Sportsradio 820. This came on the heels of 4 broadcasting-filled years in college, followed by a 2 year sabbatical to fritter about in pursuit of rock stardom.

Can you believe they hired you?

Since that internship, when you showed up so often in wildly tattered ripped black jeans, you’ve become more professional, more comfortable, and have gotten closer and closer to the games. Decades later, the Score carried the White Sox for 5 years after you’d risen to midday host. A season-long all access pass teaches you the secret lesson on how to be comfortable at the ballpark: it’s the people, stupid.

Genuinely noticing and interacting with the parking lot guys, the elevator attendants, the PR folks, or the soundmen in the back of the radio booth….this is the stuff that cements your sense of place. You’re on the clock daily there, everyone, and it’s a unique process of assimilation. You’ve all learned how the sausage is made, via varying personal timelines. You have to balance your irrepressible excitement of WORKING AT A BASEBALL GAME with acknowledging glances that indicate the banality of professional repetition. The trick is to outwardly portray that it’s not overwhelming to be there, while protecting the inner gratitude and truth of just how damn lucky you are.

And over the years you share some of that with people who get it. You talk baseball, kids, rock and roll, life. You finally feel mostly at home in ballparks on both sides of a 2 team town. It’s a dream you don’t want to end.

In 2016, you infiltrated baseball life as insidiously as a talk radio guy could; covering 4 of the World Series games as media, including Game 7 in Cleveland. Crazily, you ended up watching the celebration over the shoulders of Pat Hughes and Ron Coomer in the flagship station’s booth.

The moment, over the shoulders.

You hosted midday coverage of the Cubs parade, culminating with an open air broadcast perch between the masses and the podium. Insane.

“What if this is as good as it gets?” You figured it was. Especially when, less than 2 years later, professional humbling came at the hands of a newly re-crowned executive-king, determined to reshuffle an already winning hand now that the table was his. It’s his card game, you accepted, though the bitterness lingered and threatened to cripple.

But don’t use the wheelchair just because it has become available. You saw others quit, and that will not be you. You have to keep grinding, like a slugging corner outfielder who suddenly finds himself Designated For Assignment. It was clearly time to grab a first baseman’s mitt, and see if you could play there, or even DH.

This brings us present, and finds me offered a few days of doing pregame and postgame for the Cubs radio network. Thanks, Mitch Rosen.

And thank you, Zach Zaidman. Zach is an absolute gem of a radio teammate, and always has been, withstanding abuse as a Bears guest on snarky shows while never losing his cool. Now, he’s been tasked with highly structured pre/post for Hughes and Coomer, and playing foil/producer/backup/appreciative chorus during 162 baseball games. He does it with passion, curiosity, and humility. He has enhanced a really good radio team, and along with engineer Dave Miska fills the room with genuinely warm, excellent people.

Zach has been supportive of Spiegelian inclusion, conceptually, and has patiently guided the newbie’s education while simultaneously stepping up to fill the full time play by play shoes of an absolute legend. He has made it sound easy, when it is most definitely not, and still frequently turned around to make sure I was doing okay. Class.

And thank you, Ron Coomer. “You need anything in the locker room, you let me know,” said the long time big leaguer who has a daily audience with the manager. I’ve been around the players and the clubhouse plenty, so I’m good, but knowing he had my back if anything got weird was beautiful. And when it came time for Coom and I to interact with his “Keys To The Game,” or the occasional mid-inning banter, he was attentive and encouraging.

Oh by the way, he’s brilliant. What he deduces from a baseball game from above is waaaay more than he sometimes chooses to share and describe. That self-editing is usually done for the quality of the broadcast, so as to not overwhelm the listener, and so as to not distract the flow of the mellifluous Hughes. But I have gotten much smarter between innings.

Back to you. The first time you did pregame; there were serious nerves. You receive those butterflies like a challenging, non-threatening reacquaintance; this is not the occasional performance anxiety hosting a talk show solo can bring. This is the exhilaration of the new. Get the sponsorships in. Fill the gaps with facts and numbers, harder core baseball content than normal conversation. Somehow, eventually, put your own personality and entertainment in the shows, but slow down…just complete the task as instructed for the moment.

Don’t miss the national anthem. Do the legal ID. Give the producer clean in-cues for the pre-produced pieces. Hit all your commercial break out-cues cleanly. Don’t curse or say anything offensive that will mark the end of your career. Be interesting. Overall, try and sound like the audio equivalent of what you learned to physically represent all those years ago at the ballpark: comfortable assurance that does not negate the absurd joy of being there.

Because here’s the thing: any of us who got into the sports media business, along with the millions who thought about it but went another way, got hooked on the idea because of the Games. The Games are the thing, around which have sprung sports sections, talk shows, blogs, podcasts, Twitter, and the rest of it. Most of us have worked for the Remora fish while the Great White shark hunts and eats. The Game, man, this new job has brought you into the Game.

These men are excellent at what they do, and incredibly kind.

You finally made it to the show. You can attest to have seen no fungus on anyone’s shower shoes. Yes Crash, they hit white baseballs for batting practice, and the ballpark is like a cathedral.

Postgame is a unique animal. You’ve fully embraced and experienced the laconic pace of a 3 hour ballgame. Then, bam. With the insane pace of sponsored elements, the drive to include all you have gleaned and written during the course of the game, commercial breaks, waiting for the manager’s postgame comments, and cycling through full highlights, a beginner’s in-show mental state can properly be summed up this way: BLBLBLLBLBLBLFNNDKSKBLLDJFJSKKAAKLFJFGNDFNJSDKDFKKFKLDEIEIDSKDDF.

Afterwards, breathe. Thank Herb Lawrence and Dave Miska for their awesomeness. Gather your things. Text your wife that you’re headed towards transportation. Walk quietly, solitarily, down the hall and the stairs, emerging to an impossibly quiet and barren upper concourse. The stillness is beautiful. Pause and mindfully try to take it in. Walk down the ramps, or lazily use the elevator. Exit the ballpark and dart skillfully through drunks, cops, and traffic like a slow motion Devin Hester. On your way home, dissect the job you’ve done, making sure to re-frame mistakes that elicited shame as teachable moments that will make you better. Breathe some more. Call your wife, if she responded to the earlier text. If she’s managed to fall asleep without you, don’t dare disturb her.

That calm assurance you portrayed fades away, and you try to let the exuberant gratitude fill the void, laughingly dismissing the useless doubt.

Do it again, better, tomorrow. Let yourself dream about just how good it could be.

Appreciations, Baseball, Cubs 2016 Season, Main Slider Home, Sports Writings, Uncategorized

2016 WS Game 3, and The History Of My Baseball Everything

Curiosity can masquerade as a sneaky byproduct of procrastination. Inertia can then be intellectually rationalized.

I have not written about the baseball season of two years ago nearly as much as I wish I had. Sometimes I think that’s holding me back from being truly present and productive. A life long deep-seated need to document all good experiences and capture them forever has met its match.

2016 is the greatest year in which I have ever been close to baseball.

That was a difficult sentence to phrase, because the feelings and experiences I desperately need to package and file away are about the year. The whole thing. And like a young hitter’s progress, they’re not necessarily linear.

For starters, I am not “in” baseball. I have been “around” baseball, and therefore “close to” baseball a great deal. I have spent time in the dugouts and press boxes of Fenway, Wrigley, Comiskey 2, Dodger, and several more.

I have seen games in all of those, plus old Yankee, old Shea, Baltimore’s old Memorial Stadium, Milwaukee’s old County Stadium, The Vet in Philly, and others….19 in all. I recently wrote about ballpark collecting.

Funny. Here I am, trying to write about 2016 in so completist and perfect a fashion that I have started with the history of my baseball everything. Such is the power of that season.

The history of my baseball everything begins with Dad. And he was part of 2016. It continued with brother Bob. And he was part of 2016. It is felt deeply in my son, and he was there. It is revitalized by my fiery Latina, and she was there.

The history of my baseball everything was dominated by a love of the Red Sox for my first 21 years, then control was wrestled slowly, achingly away via new long-lasting proximity to the intense character and history of the Chicago Cubs and White Sox. For 26 years I have worked here, lived with these teams, covered them, and felt the fans’ roller coaster with as much sports empathy as I could muster.

The Red Sox finally broke their curse 12 years into my Chicago immersion, and I felt an odd, wistful distance from that title in 2004. 7 years later, the Red Sox’ mastermind came to me.

Theo Epstein brought hope and credibility to Wrigley, and an inconceivable 5 years culminated with a title in 2016.

My baseball everything had found me and smacked me in the present, bringing levels of satisfaction, understanding, and access that will never be topped. I was on the field after the Cubs beat the Dodgers to go their first World Series since 1945. I went to 4 games of that Fall Classic as media, and 3 as a fan. I have stories of postgame interactions I can never tell.

It’s not going to get better. I have to admit that.

This, I think, is my fear of the writing; that the writing will be letting it go.

But I have to trust that by writing it, I am doing the opposite of letting it go. I am strengthening the experience. I am setting myself up for the kind of legible refresher I’ll need for however long I live. And this is me sharing stories that my son will need in order to truly know his dad. These are stories maybe you will someday need. They might be stories we need right now.

You’ve been there with me, as I’ve tried to write the truth.

I took you to Mesa, as the future started to take shape.
I took you to the playoffs, when they vanquished the cardinals in 2015.
I took you to “the big bed” in my home during the Giants series in 2016, when my son so obviously cemented himself as a Cubs fan that all I could do was lean back and grin.
I took you to Game 7.

So, where else have we not gone?

*******

It is early October.  My 83 year old gem of a father is texting me about his upcoming, long scheduled, visit. I tell him the Thursday night he’ll be in Chicago happens to be game 3 of the world series. The NL lost the All Star Game, so if the Cubs get that far, the game will be here.
His response:  “OMG.”  He’s never been to a series game. I should know that, but do not.  I have a fixation to deliver from that moment on.
It is now the day of game 3.  It is the first WS game at Wrigley since 1945. It’s a season overstuffed full of “1st time since…” stats and trends.  A 25-6 start by a team that hasn’t won a title since 1908 will do that.
On the day of game 3, I wake and single-daddy my way through the morning, getting my 5 year old to school by 8 before catching a ride to Sluggers’ in Wrigleyville for a live remote of the radio show.  We are 250 yards from the Wrigley marquee.  Since moving to Chicago in ‘92 I have spent time in Sluggers’ to drink, eat, hit in the batting cages, live hard on NFL Sundays, and see friends like Dave Allen play Dueling Pianos in the upstairs bar.
This time we do “The Spiegel & Goff Show” in a mostly empty room for all 4 hours.  Rumors have the place charging 100 bucks just to get in, so people stay away. Other bars are pillaging the fans even more.  At 8:45 I am text-pestering Theo to walk across the street and join us.  He calls in right at the top of the 9 o’clock hour instead.  We talk to the mastermind on the day of the game.  That’ll do, babe. That’ll do.
It has been a 5 day odyssey since Dad texted “OMG,” but I am closing in on 2 separate pairs of tickets to the game. A radio pal is helping me through a channel he will not disclose.  And the ticket guru himself has me on his short list of those deserving and ready to pay.  I am a very lucky man.
Brother Bob flies in during the show.  He is a destroyer of sports bucket lists these days.  The last 5 days he’s been playing a tantalizing game of StubHub Chicken, and almost dropped 3 grand a piece for 3 tickets.  My press pass opens up my own options, but experientially I want to sit with them.  I preach patience to Bobby.  Patience, faith, positivity, with a touch of willful delusion.
Bobby arrives to the bar, with no luggage for his one day trip, and we converge at the end of the show to walk towards the ballpark.  The Ticket Guru has that beautiful grin he always seems to wear.  So many walking by the place know him.  Many know me.  My bro is feeling the electricity of proximity to the sport that I try to never take for granted. I am kvelling (Yiddish) at being able to share this with exactly the right person in my life.  He was the center fielder of his high school team, and I was the 8 year old batboy.  His team bus used to pick me up at elementary school for away games; I lined up batting helmets near the backstop like a champ.  The cherubic Ticket Guru hands us 2 magic World Series tickets I had hoped for but could not expect.
Our next scheduled rendezvous is around the corner by the Fire House.  The radio pal meets my bro.  They are very different men, but I know they’d get along.  We really should all hang out some time.  But not now.  He’s working, and I have lots to do before game time.  We get our 2nd pair.
The quest for an elusive 2 has ended with us holding 4. Who will be my 4th?  At hat time I am in a fairly new but very powerful relationship.  She is a beautiful soul.  She’s so very healthy, and calming to me.  She’s incredibly sweet, pleasing to be with, and easy to talk to.  She has been a passionate, emotionally connected Cubs fan from her youth as a poor little girl in Bucktown.  Her father used to only be present in her life on Sundays, and he often took her, her sister, and 4 cousins to the Wrigley bleachers.  It is a special place for her, and we’ve had a couple amazing 2016 dates there together.
I call Christine at work, and say “I wanna ask you something.  Would you like to come to see the Cubs in the World Series with me tonight?”  She cries on the phone, at work, spontaneously, joyfully, freely.  She is the right person at the right moment.
There is personal chaos to manage in my afternoon.  I go home, walk the dog, get changed, pick up my son from school, Uber him through traffic crosstown to his mom’s house, then ride a Divvy Bike from her house to Wrigleyville.  That last transportation detail is brilliance, if I don’t say so my damn self.  Plus, it’s incredibly fun to slowly roll into the eye of the storm.
I walk from the bike station on Irving Park to our agreed appointed spot: the Ron Santo statue.  It is an eternity to pass one block of Sheffield between Waveland and Addison; later we find out that the 5 busses blocking all pedestrians contain the Cubs’ scouts and their families.  Theo takes care of the people that make his goals achievable.
I get there, and meet my father, brother, and girlfriend.  We take some of the most joyful pictures of our combined 232 years on the planet.
Bobby and Christine will start in one pair of seats; I get the honor and pleasure of escorting Herb Spiegel to his 1st ever World Series.  The man who taught me to love this game through joy and curiosity still feels it all with passion.  He has 2 fake hips and 2 fake knees, but he can get around.  I hold him close, arm in arm, as we make our way through the jam-packed ticket booth and ballpark concourse.  He did this very same thing for young Matt many times.  I’m struck so hard by the symmetry in getting to re-stir and replenish our emotional wells.  I have this opportunity to level the water.
We make it to our row.  He stands longer than I do, holding the seatback in front of him, staring out at gorgeous, hallowed Wrigley on the finest night it has seen to date.  The place feels perfect.  My pops is smiling like an eight year old, with his whole body, examining every inch of his surroundings.  I sit down, and cry very hard.  Gratitude.  Relief after the insanity of the day.  Pride that I’ve hit a professional place where this is possible.  Exhaustion from the steady tension of what we all do to hold our complicated lives together.  I cry so hard, and let it all go.
Let’s stop pretending that the history of my baseball everything is going to get any better than that.
**********
Bobby bargains with ticketholders near him; two dudes come take the slightly better seats Dad and I start in, in exchange for their 2.  So our foursome spends 7 innings together.
The game happens.  Oh yeah, the game.  It is a 2-1 loss, and it was never more than a 1 run separation all night.  So every pitch from the first to last was tense, packed with the possibility of a game changer.
Leaving the park and the neighborhood is an adventure unto itself.  The city has over-prepared, and done so with very little concern for the physical limitations of the attendees.  Dad has to walk his 4 phony joints for 4 blocks down Clark Street before we can reach an Uber.  My girl Christine holds him arm in arm, using her strength, energy, and goodness to make his steps lighter.  She’s a keeper.
There will be more games, more personal stories, and certainly more drama in the history of my baseball everything.  But this is the night I will forever think about first.  It is the story that gets the most reaction when it is shared.  Emotions rule our cores.
The tricky thing about having access to events like this is making sure you choose your companions for reasons you will never regret.  The experiences inevitably become more about who you were with than what you did.
Even World Series games.
Tonight the Red Sox open the 2018 World Series at home against the Los Angeles Dodgers.  I’ll watch on tv with my fiery Latina and the now 6 year old boy.  Then tomorrow morning, I’ll drop him at school, drive to the airport and board a plane.  Pops will take a train from his home in Jersey to New York, and he and Bobby will drive up to Boston.  We’ll meet up in late afternoon, and go to game 2 together.
For one day I join my big bro as a destroyer of sports bucket lists.  I will have no luggage for the one day trip.
Remember when I said that my baseball everything is never going to get better than 2016?
There’s no reason not to try.
Baseball, Collected Wisdom, Favorite Appreciations, Matt’s Satisfying Expressions

Ballpark Collecting Time is Here, NOW.

It’s never too late to start something that will take the rest of your life to accomplish.

I wanna hit every MLB ballpark.  Lots of people go on or have completed this quest.  It’s absurd, really, how many of them I’ve not been to.  I get jealous when I see tweets like this from friend and colleague Chris Tannehill:

Cheers to Ballpark #20 @PetcoPark @BallastPoint pic.twitter.com/XU07fPV21R

— Chris Tannehill (@ChrisTannehill) June 30, 2018

20!  The man is barely in his mid-30’s.  His ballpark list is incredibly impressive, like a Bert Blyleven curve. Plus, he seems to have had very pure, solid fan experiences at the parks, with beers and snacks and friends and such.  I’ve so often been working; upstairs with snooty, carefully detached media, unable to hang out where the real people are and fully feel the building.

“Other than hanging with family, the ballpark visits are probably my favorite thing,” says Tannehill. “Obviously I love to travel but don’t have the time or money to see the world; seeing ballparks allows me to explore the country.”

You’d think I, a baseball romantic bred into this passion essentially from the womb, would have been one of the many who collect ballparks.  I am a man whose pronunciation of “#baahhhhseballl” was so lampooned on the radio that it turned itself from insult to compliment almost daily.    A Twitter account was born just to keep the ridicule flowing.

And yet, my ballpark list feels meek and inadequate, like a Doug Jones fastball.

Last Friday night, amid accompanying my wife on a work trip to Dallas (I have some free time these days), we decided to hit the stadium in Arlington. An insurance company I’d never heard of has the rights, so “Globe Life” isn’t just what all us Earthlings are living every day, it’s the home of the Texas Rangers.

The teams were bad.  Hell, one of them was the White Sox.  Dylan Covey got absolutely destroyed, the Sox played like the clowns Reynaldo Lopez accused them of being a couple weeks ago, and it was 10-0 Rangers by the 3rd. But hey, Matt Davidson pitched in the 8th!

Secret weapon. pic.twitter.com/i6Xdqjbr2e

— Chicago White Sox (@whitesox) June 30, 2018

That was awesome….the man showed a legit curve and splitter. He said afterwards it was a dream come true.

StubHub got us great seats behind the plate for under a hundred bucks, and we stayed all night until the postgame fireworks, accompanied by a well-crafted Beatles medley.  This was my kind of night.  Adrian Beltre didn’t do anything special, but I’m still glad I saw him. And maybe it was the weird 17% alcohol drinks in mini-baseball shaped cans, but I enjoyed watching the teams have to go through the motions of playing out the game because they must.  It reminded me of times I have sung at terrible, corporate parties.  The band knows the gig absolutely sucks by the middle of the first set….the crowd barely pays attention, we are sonic wallpaper.  But you play your best.  You finish the night with professionalism. It’s a job.

This column appears in full on the Score’s website, here.

BUT…here, you can comment, let’s get a thread going.  What’s your ballpark count at right now?  What traditions do you do at each new park?  Talk to me.

Homegirl wore the Rangers hat, just so her White Sox loathing was clear. True Story.

 

Baseball, Cubs 2016 Season, Sports

Your night at Wrigley as the Cubs Beat the Cards in 2015.

You get to Wrigley Field at 8:15 a.m. The neighborhood is already buzzing, and the ballpark bar is filled with workers prepping for the masses.

You’re part of a radio show speaking directly to the hopes, fears, joy and criticism of a rabid Cubs fan base that still can’t quite believe this is happening. Your interactions are alternately filled with calm, titillation, analysis, nervous laughter and genuine romance.

The president of baseball operations sits down with you at 11:30 a.m. and thinks back to his first few months on the job in late 2011. He tells you about the 125 members of the scouting and development team, all together in a hotel ballroom in Mesa, painstakingly mapping out a manual on how the Cubs were going to teach the game. There was one day for hitting, one for pitching, one for defense, a fourth to consolidate. A blueprint emerged. He tells you how this week those same 125 people were flown in, with their families, to walk the warning track and sit in the bleachers for the first home playoff game of the era the day before.

Symmetry. Deserved rewards.

The manager tells you at 12:40 p.m. that he couldn’t be more proud of his team, for approaching these moments the way they have. He doesn’t say it, and he doesn’t need to, but you know he has been the driving force for their confidence and calm. He’s a master of both strategy and atmosphere. He told you at the beginning how trusting relationships would be built and how brutal honesty would get the best from his players.

It’s worked.

The show ends, the neighborhood fills and you wait for your friend to meet you for the game. He’s a lifelong Cubs fan, approaching 50, ready to attend his first ever October game. You’re in the upper deck on the first-base side. You get sky and sunset views. The orange and red foliage on neighborhood trees behind the bleachers reminds you all evening that this is fall baseball, and your gratitude multiplies.

You stand with two strikes, for every batter on either team. You question the best manager you’ve ever seen when his starter gets hit hard, because that’s your right. You’ve invested the hours watching and learning the game so you can feel you ought to be in charge. The fans are glad you aren’t.

You high-five strangers when the Cubs get out of a jam. You jump and cackle when the pitcher gets an RBI single. You watch the hot-headed Cardinals pitcher lose his cool and hope he crumbles.

You watch the last remaining rookie slugger join the power barrage, guessing fastball against a frustrated pitcher and destroying a three-run homer into the right-field bleachers. You watch him sprint around the bases, jump into the dugout and bounce from teammate to teammate as the crowd roars, knowing of his traumatic season and arduous work to get through it.

Deserved rewards.

As the “middle closer” is striking out the side to get out of a fourth-inning scare, you hear a swell of cheers moving behind you and turn around. There’s the owner, walking the aisle between the 400 and 500 levels, high-fiving every fan in his path. He knows how patient they’ve been. He’s also drinking in their appreciation, accepting the praise for how he’s allowed the architect to build the foundation.

Deserved rewards.

It’s 4-3, Cubs. The scrap-heap starter turned reliever is trying to survive a threat. A single to right field ties the game but doesn’t give up the lead. Instead you watch the right fielder, who will soon be subbed out for a better defender, deliver an absolutely perfect throw. He’s the best athlete on the field, and he’s playing the best baseball of his professional life at the most important of his times. You plan to watch the throw again and again when you get home.

Like your mom used to say, a beautifully executed play looks like ballet.

You watch the 26-year-old “veteran” leader take the lefty reliever deep for the second game in a row. You doubt one run is enough. Later, the 22-year-old slugger hits a blast you think must have hit one of those now-empty rooftops behind the giant right-field videoboard. The slugger gets a curtain call, which you miss because you’re still talking to strangers about the majesty of the bomb.

You cringe when the reliever you don’t trust, against St. Louis, comes in, and then you smile when he dominates. You watch the closer bring the shrine tantalizingly close to bliss, needed outs dwindling down to one. The best Cardinal singles, bringing the tying run to the plate. It’s not going to feel easy.

Good. This isn’t easy. Rebuilding an organization isn’t easy. Finding future stars in the draft, in trade and in international signings isn’t easy. Coming together as a mix of players and accepting whatever role the boss asks of you isn’t easy. Hell, trusting the plan while watching three years of noncompetitive baseball from your couch isn’t easy.

And winning a playoff series against the top rival and organizational model isn’t easy. It’s stressful for the viewers. But the stress makes the success that much sweeter. This is why you always embrace the stress.

They win. You look to the sky. You think of Cubs fans you loved who aren’t here, and you hope they’re watching. You thank the stars for your presence. You hug your friend. You sing along to a song you hate. You let yourself say nothing, drinking in as much as your senses will allow. You sing some more. You text your father. You don’t leave.

You watch men in uniforms and then suits pile on to each other with that special mix of relief and elation. You watch the media scurrying to capture their words. You look to the brand new videoboard to see the disco-ball champagne celebration going on inside the clubhouse. You see the shortstop-turned-second baseman who took so much criticism this year in ski goggles spraying champagne onto the ceiling, and you wonder how on earth we all got here.

Deserved rewards.

You want to see that twice more.


 “You know, I guess I think I’ve always been a professional critic… you know, or some sort of professional appreciator or something."
-Nick Hornby, High Fidelity (2000)

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