OF COURSE I am thinking about the 1986 World Series... what else would I be thinking about as the games deciding the Super Bowl berths are about to be played.
But I am not thinking about it for the reasons that you would think.
In the past, I lamented 1986 as the ultimate "what might have been."
But 2004 and 2007 put that to rest.
Then I lamented the great flop of 1986 when I thought of Jim Rice's candidacy for the Hall of Fame. Had the Red Sox won in 1986, I argued, Rice would have been in the Hall of Fame on the first ballot. He didn't have Ted's stats or Yaz's stats... but the Sox would have won when Rice was captain.
Rice's election last year put that to rest.
But today's Jets game got me thinking about that fateful 10th inning.
The Mets and Jets are very similar franchises... and not just because their names rhyme.
They are second banana franchises in their own cities. The Yankees own the baseball scene and the Giants have always had a bigger following.
They both have had their share of heart break and dysfunction over the years.
Both have fan bases that have listened to Yankee fans and Giant fans crow about their more recent titles. The Yankees with their 27 titles and the Giants with Super Bowl titles in the 1980s, 1990s and 2000s.
And of course they each had, over a period of 9 months in 1969, a startling championship that defined their franchise to this very day.
Both seemed beyond the realm of possibility... the AFL was supposed to be inferior to the NFL and the Super Bowl had been a lackluster joke in its first two games.
And of course the Mets averaged a 56-106 record for each of its first seven seasons.
Both teams rode the back of a brash new superstar... Broadway Joe predicting the outcome by the poolside...
Tom Terrific mowing down NL batters left and right heading into the Series.
And oddly, they both beat heavily favored teams that played in Baltimore.
Now there is one huge difference between the franchises:
The Jets have never won since. The Mets have... one other time.
The Mets have that, for them, Amazin' moment of coming back from 2 runs down, 2 outs, nobody on in the 10th that was so beautifully recreated in
this video game.
Now just imagine if the Mets never won that game. (And NO, I am not going to say "Imagine if Buckner made that play. The game was already tied. Buckner's error prevented the game from going into the 10th. It neither clinched the World Series for the Met nor would have clinched the World Series for the Red Sox... please tattoo that on your wrist.)
Imagine if Gary Carter made an out... or Kevin Mitchell made an out... or Schraldi got that third strike on Ray Knight... or Mookie Wilson swung and missed on one of his 2 strike foul balls against Bob Stanley.
Trust me, I did every day of my life between October 1986 to October 2004.
But I always thought of the Red Sox side... for the Mets, they would still be pining for 1969.
1986 would have been thrown on the scrap pile of frustrations along with the end of the 1973 World Series, the trade of Seaver, the Scioscia homer in 1988, the bases loaded walk to end the 1999 NLCS, losing to the Yankees in the 2000 World Series, the called third on Beltran, the great collapse of 2007, the almost as great collapse of 2008...
All the while clinging to their lone moment of glory in 1969.
Kind of like the Jets do now, still waiting for that second great highlight to go with Joe Willy Namath running off the field, finger in the air.
Did you know that ESPN Classic just showed the 6th game this afternoon.
ReplyDeleteBut even with that Red Sox fans have alot more to be happy about than Metsie Fans.
Here is a crazy fact. Mark Sanchez has now won as many playoff games in his career as Namath did in his career.
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