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Like I have said before, being a Cubs fan is awesome. I get to be both optimistic and pessimistic at the same time. I can hope that this is the year while still knowing they will lose 90 games. I can't imagine rooting for any other team.
Go Cards.
Albert rocks.
Once the bats come alive...
Konerko is not going to finish the season batting .188
Crede is not going to finish the season hitting .200
Jermaine Dye will finish significantly above .216
Things will fall into place.
Of course lots of us care. Have you heard all the boos at Wrigley Field of late? But what exactly are we to do about it, when the management sucks? It's not like we can do a torchlit march on Wrigley Field or the Tribune building.
"Things will fall into place."
Carl, you're sounding like a Cubs fan! :)
The 2006 St. Louis Cardinals are only the fourth team to win a World Series in their first season in a new stadium (Busch Stadium), and the first since the 1923 Yankees (Yankee Stadium). The other teams to do so are the 1909 Pirates (Forbes Field) and the 1912 Red Sox (Fenway Park).
The only World Series involving a team moving out of an old stadium to date is the 1996 World Series, which featured the final three baseball games in the history of Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium, home of the Atlanta Braves until that year.
Only two managers have won a World Series in both leagues: Sparky Anderson (1975 and '76 with the Cincinnati Reds, 1984 with the Detroit Tigers) and Tony LaRussa (1989 with the Oakland Athletics, 2006 with the St. Louis Cardinals).
In the last fifteen World Series match-ups, nine teams with a lower winning percentage than their opponent have emerged as champions. This is currently the highest percentage of any stretch of 15 World Series.
The 1907-1908 Cubs, 1921-1922 Giants and 1975-1976 Reds are the only National League teams to win back-to-back World Series.
The Chicago Cubs hold the record for the longest World Series drought (still active heading into 2007), with their last title coming in 1908 (99 years). Other substantial droughts include the Philadelphia Phillies (97 years, from their inception in 1883 to 1980); the Chicago White Sox (88 years, from 1917 to 2005); the Boston Red Sox (86 years, from 1918 to 2004). Obviously, the Cubs are due...
Minor error - the Cubs moved into Wrigley in 1916, not 1914. Before then the Chicago Whales of the Federal League played there from 1914-5.
The ramps have been built with a particular downslope so that cub fans can leave the stadium doing a sad shuffle.