Why we watch sports…

i always get the sense that sports non-fans have trouble understanding why we sports fans care so much. in fact, sometimes i even forget why we care so much. but occasionally, a sports moment is so special that you immediately remember what it is that we love so much about sports.i was at old pro (we’re gonna start calling it OP from now) this afternoon, watching the end of the detroit and new york american league division series (that’s baseball for any of you non-fans). now certainly everyone knows who new york’s american league team is (the yankees), but you’ll certainly be excused if you don’t actually know that detroit’s team is called the ‘tigers.’ that’s because, for the past twenty years or so, the tigers have been crap. at times, much worse than crap. in fact, for the past ten years, seeing one of your fantasy baseball pitchers ready to face detroit has meant comfort and relief. the tigers have been so bad that they turned a once-proud baseball town into a baseball graveyard.that’s until this year, when jim leyland (baseball’s grandfatherly tough nice guy, one of the most respected managers in the game) came to town, just as the tigers’ 20-year rebuilding process was ready to come to fruition. mix in a few nice free agent pickups, and voila! playoff and (now) ALCS appearance. and they’re not done yet.

but why is this worth writing about? because anyone who watched the postgame celebration by the tigers couldn’t help but feel great for them. i’ve had about ten skin-tingling sports moments in my life (the first definitely being john taylor’s super bowl winning catch and the latest being tiger woods’ sobbing british open victory this year) and today, sitting at the OP, watching the postgame (with no audio, mind you) was the latest.

first came the eruption of elation by the entire bar as the yankees were knocked out (that’s standard in any sports bar outside of new york city). but it was much more than the usual “goodbye yankees” cheers. the group of true tigers fans in the bar screamed and hugged each other as if they had just been released from prison. and on the screen? a postgame scene unlike any other for an anti-climactic 3-1 division series victory. every fan stayed standing at his seat, deliriously cheering, screaming, and singing even as the tigers players ran into the lockerroom to spray champagne on one another. but the fans were not disappointed, because soon the entire team had returned to the field, champagne bottles in hand, to spray on the fans themselves. kenny rogers, he of the embarrassing camera incident a few years ago, snuck out of the dugout with three bottles, passing them out to fans and dumping the third on a uniformed security guard. groups of detroit players literally skipped down along the field walls, slapping hands with the fans and sharing a special sports moment. i cheered for the tigers this series precisely because i knew detroit would enjoy it more, but even i was surprised by the celebration. it was great and i loved it.

and off on the side, the camera caught an emotional moment. pudge rodriguez stood celebrating with another player, as leyland came up behind him and tapped him on the shoulder. they exchanged a quick nod and a genuine smile, and hugged each other. no words, just the respectful and fatherly acknowledgement of a great manager with a great player.

that is why we watch sports, for moments like today. congratulations to detroit the city, detroit the fans, and detroit the team. i hope you lose in seven :).


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