Friday, September 28, 2007

Where the Sidewalk Ends

So this is how it ends for the Brewers in 2007: a sea of half-hearted homer hanky-waving fans at Miller Park looking on as the good guys once again left way too many guys on base and couldn't get reliable pitching when it mattered most. Of Sheets warming up in the bullpen but not entering the game, of hoping Kevin Mench comes through in the clutch. The sense of inevitability was palpable, on TV, in my house, even in Ueck's voice.

My night watching the game was a microcosm of the year in general.

A great start. Braun drives in Weeks! Good base running by JJ! Hart with a clutch hit! Off Maddux! Capuano's looking pretty good! As the first inning ends, Will says "Game's over, Daddy." Not quite, but I'd take it!

Then, big struggle in the middle. Cappy can't get anyone out. This is going to be the 117th game in a row the Brewers lose when he pitches.

Then, the lead relinquished. At about this time, I gave Will his bath and continued reading to him from Shel Silverstein's Where the Sidewalk Ends. As I laid him down the book's title seemed appropriate given the game I was about to return to. (No, last night was not The Giving Tree night for the boy, although it was for the Brewers.) The season seemed over, sadly. The eulogy began writing itself in my mind.

But then, as leaving the room, Will said "Daddy, leave the door open a little bit." Yes! Another perfectly-timed optimistic reference! This will be a great anecdote to tell the guys when we're downing drinks and celebrating another in the long line of once-every-25 years glory of Milwaukee baseball! We will take "Leave the Door Open" signs to games! Billy Hall will record a rap song of that name!

On TV, we load the bases on some guy named Cla, down one. Here comes Counsell, homegrown World Series hero - the door is still open! Then bam - double play. Bam - the Guy Who Looks Like Spicoli goes yard (silver lining - for my fantasy team!). Bam - Heath Bell and Hell's Bells strike our guys out like overmatched Little Leaguers. False hope dashed.

Game over. Season over.

Here's my plan: institute a reversal of the 24-hour rule most football coaches give their teams after a big win. Wallow in sorrow and self-pity for one day, then go about finding all the good things about this team and this season. Let's get that 82nd win, at least get that monkey off our back.

First things first: congratulations to the Cubs. It would be dishonest to give one of those "Keep the World Series trophy in the NL Central" lines, because none of us want that. Whether it's a quick sweep or a tantalizing, agonizing, Bartman-esque defeat, just lose, baby. But the best team won the division. Even with their flaws, the Cubs had a little bit better hitting and starting pitching, much better relief pitching and fielding. And, importantly, much more money.

But that's what's so great about baseball. Over the course of a 162-game season, flukes don't last, flaws are exposed, the cream rises to the top. And there's plenty of reason to believe that the Brewers will be that cream next year and in years to come. They will have to find a way to overcome the market disparity between Milwaukee and Chicago (presumably with a new deep-pocketed owner) when financing the team. Minnesota and Oakland did it well, why can't we?

Just looked at a Shel Silverstein site and saw a couple more titles that could apply to the Brewers: The Missing Piece (relief pitching?), Falling Up (our rise has coincided with a fall-off in the rest of the NL Central), A Light in the Attic (five years ago, the Brewers didn't have electricity, period).

Hopefully a year from now I'll be reading Will not Silverstein, but Haudricourt and Hunt chronicling a pennant winner. That would help erase the sting of a year the door was open, but we couldn't walk through it.

1 comment:

Scott said...

Great post, T. And analogies. It's certainly painful to watch every single opportunity go to waste. In this game. Last game. The game before. Playoff teams capitalize on those open doors, and the Brewers just couldn't do it. Jen and I had a good laugh: this time last year we were setting up "Brewer" tables for our wedding. How fun would the Brewer theme have been this year? 1) Brewers being eliminated as we set out table cards. 2) Hill in the same city as us when the Cubs clinch the division. Yes...it could be even worse...

My one bright spot: I loved the shot of Prince in the dugout watching the Padres clap hands after the game (I want to say Bill Hall was also there in the background). While everyone else was packing up and getting the hell out of dodge, Prince just took in the moment. You could just see it in his eyes that the playoffs meant everything to him. In the post-Yount and Molitor era, it's nice to finally see a true leader emerge on this club.

It sounds odd, but I feel the most disappointed for Ueck. I, along with the rest of Wisconsin sports fans, just wanna hear him erupt in Harry Doyle-like fashion when the Brewers eventually win it all. And for the first time, I honestly feel like our time is near.

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