Reading the entries, it is obvious the name of this blog fits quite nicely. All of us – even the Yankees fan sitting atop the mountain of garish World Series trophies, even the
Sox fan who has suddenly taken up residence in a 6 million dollar condo on the Upper East Side (successful Bostonians still long to be New Yorkers) and even our own representative from the Township whose team is awash in talent, prospects, a new gem of a ballpark and the most $$$ outside of the Bronx - have a good argument to make as to why they can blog at a site entitled Misery Loves Company.
It’s not inconceivable that the ever dwindling core of die-hard baseball aficionados in the US will relegate the
Sox' star-crossed history to some dusty hard cover book on the National Pastime in the children’s section of the local library. I don’t know any children who even casually follow baseball so as Doris
Kearns Goodwin’s brain cells slowly dry up and get absorbed into her bloodstream to be disposed of each time she visits the loo, so will the legends of Teddy Ballgame, Pesky’s Pole and Billy Buckner’s battered and bruised body’s betrayal in Game 6. As a result, today’s generation of fans whose attention span is less than the time it takes Jimmie Rollins to leg out a triple are probably under the mistaken notion that the Boston Red
Sox are THE GREATEST TEAM EVER! However, dear Rob knows better. He still proudly bears the scars that will always make the notion of him knowing misery seem quite reasonable.
The concept of misery is a relative one and that probably explains
TJ. The past 7 years in the Bronx equal roughly the last 99 on Chicago’s North Side. It’s amazing but I really believe what I just typed.
TJ knows misery. He has much loftier expectations. Each of us on this blog has known for the past 4 years, that the Yanks
aren’t built for the postseason but dammit, they press on anyway, fooling Yankee lovers until October.
Whitney’s
Mets are an altogether different story. One season, it’s Flushing’s foolish largess spent on trying to keep pace in the Borough wars. The next year, it’s the inexplicable injuries hobbling the team all season long. Recently, it’s the humiliation of losing to a middling Cardinals team in the
NLCS and of course, Last September.
In many ways, Whitney’s misery trumps everyone else’s. Rob’s is salved by the recent success. The Yanks will always THE team on Baseball Tonight so at least
TJ has that. (
TJ, do you even know what it’s like to wait all the way until the end of
BBTN to watch your team’s highlights?) My own personal misery has reached numbness. In fact, it’s not misery at all. It is after all,
fait acompli, no? I cannot be fooled.
There is however, another dimension to misery. (Finally, I get to my thesis!) It is the concept or rather the reality that one is irrelevant. Heck,
TJ has as much admitted it in his opening opus on
MLC. He does not give the
Phillies a second thought whatsoever. We don’t exist. Rob probably only cares inasmuch as the
Phils usually provide the
Sox the 3 extra wins they covet each year in trying to outpace the Yanks. Whitney only cares because of the shared ineptitude of each club’s front offices and that to a lesser degree, the
Mets know what its like to be relegated to page 14 of the sports section.
What I know as a
Phillies fan is a dimension of misery that is quite unique. I exist in the gray region that no one else can see. Giddy Red
Sox fans drunk with glory stop to take a piss on me. Yanks fans are so much taller and they never deign to look down at the muck below their knees. Cubs fans get to be THE story whether they win or lose. I think I only have friends on Chicago’s South Side and Pittsburgh. Those are the only places where the teams don’t really matter. I am speaking historically of course. We all know the two franchises in F-L-A are irrelevant to Sunshine
Staters. How you fail to sell baseball to Cubans in Miami mystifies me.
What got me thinking these gloomy thoughts about my team and its absence from the American baseball conscience was a question Whit posited to me regarding my feelings about the recently retired Mike
Lieberthal.
Leiby labored for 11 seasons in South Philly donning the tools of ignorance for the first half of his career for a hapless bunch of losers and in many ways, he was the soul of the team. I suppose Curt Schilling was the soul of the team to some degree as well but he spent most of the latter part of the decade, before his deliverance to the promised land in the desert, constantly whining about the front office and its inability to turn the club around. Not so
Lieby. He was the silent, dutiful son.
Lieby was solid both offensively and defensively but never brilliant. On those late ‘90’s
Phillies teams, he remained the hope for the future. Then the
Phils started to bring up some talent from a revitalized farm system and coupled it with some shrewd front office moves (Bobby
Abreu for Kevin
Stocker) and lo and behold, they were annually earmarked by all the baseball punditry as the team on the rise. The problem with that team was that they were loaded with guys like Mike
Leiberthal who were professional to a nauseating fault. They were emotionless and gray, content with putting in a day’s work and then adjourning until
BP the next night. These were not gregarious carousers and lovable vagabonds like Dutch, the Dude and
Krukker of the
Phils of ’93. They
didn’t hang around the clubhouse ignoring their familial responsibilities while pounding Buds and
Mooseheads. They put up decent numbers, notched 80 to 85 wins and punched the clock in ever so quietly in September.
To me, unfortunately, that is what I think of when I think of Mike
Lieberthal. This guy started more opening days and squatted behind the dish for the most games of any catcher in
Phils history. More than Dutch
Daulton, Bob Boone and
Andy Seminick to name three outstanding backstops in
Phillies history. (Stop snickering
TJ!) Yet I all can think about is those underachieving, hypnotic, robotic drones. No October highlights. Hell, not even a September highlight! Oh, I am sure Whitney recalls some oppressively humid August evening where, in a game thrice delayed by rain and pushed into extra innings after 1:30 AM, a dripping, soggy Mike
Lieberthal deposited a weak fastball from some journeyman reliever over the left
centerfield fence at Shea to put the 17 remaining fans out of their misery.
So tell me, how sad is it that I can’t properly eulogize Mike
Lieberthal’s career in Philly? He should be lionized as an all time
Phillies great. But he and the rest of the 2000 to 2006
Phillies crew are a painful reminder to the city of Philadelphia about what the city is not and what it will never be. They marched perfectly to the drumbeat notion that Philly will always be an afterthought. Philly will always live in the gray. Even the highway signs on I-95 begrudgingly report the distance to Philly and only then with much embarrassment. Glory does not recognize Philadelphia. It left town about 200 years ago. Last year’s improbable run to the
NL East crown cemented
Lieberthal's and his fellow automaton's image in Philly forever. They left and then we won something – even if it disappeared in early autumn dusk in Denver.