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But then, when you get paid $30 million to drive in 35 runs and bat .250, you should expect to be booed and cat called. The Cubs could have kept Matt Murton who would have put up better numbers than Bradley for far less money and a whole lot of less controversy and attitude.
And for the record, I just wish Jim Hendry would go away....far far away.
We honor those who play the game with integrity and hustle, like ernie and fergie.
if you are saying sox fans would be more welcoming of miltie and his numbers, than i question their understanding of baseball.
Take a breath, doofus. I'm not the only one talking about this issue and asking that question. Plenty of others are as well.
I've gotten in the faces of drunks at both parks for cursing loudly in front of my wife and kids a number of times.
I will say, though, the dirty secret of the Tribune Company tenure is that they have been more than willing to keep selling $6 beers to extremely intoxicated young people, many of them underage, especially in the bleachers. That didn't happen under the Wrigleys.
The Fukudome T-shirt was stupid, but I don't think there was racist intent. The Ozzie T-shirt was racist and despicable.
I can't remember his name now, but a few years ago the White Sox had a Japanese closer. Whenever he entered the game, there would be the sound of a crashing gong, followed by the xylophone music that was played on the old Bonanza show whenever Hop Sing entered the room. Stupid, but I don't think racist.
Milton Bradley has never found happiness anywhere making millions working half a year playing baseball three hours a day. Milton, try carrying a lunch bucket to work for a while.
Dusty said Cub fans were the best in the world when he was riding high there. He said the other stuff after he was fired. We'll see what he says about Reds fans when he gets fired there at the end of this season.
Sure, inebriated Cubs fans most assuredly spew racist garbage on occasion, but it's important to note that the remarks cited here are directed towards those who have both underperformed, and in many an instance also made some very questionable statements themselves (and I'm not in any manner justifying the use of racial slurs in any context).
No mention of Derrek Lee here, who's been a solid regular since 2004 with one season of particular excellence, but has clearly regressed in terms of production.
Actually, you kinda did.
The question, people, is not about whether Bradley and some other black players/managers were poor performers.
Keep that in mind, please.
And no fans, anywhere, will ever beat Philly for being unabashed racists.
These are people who can start fist fights at Little League games. They are the ladies who roar profanities from folding chairs when the game goes badly.
Men playing boy's games brings out the boys in the men attending the games. The sick humor, the vulgar language, the parade of shirtless machismo bravado, is all a part of these events. Political correctness goes out the window when devoted fans feel an urge to express their disappointments.
The reason we see this more often at Cubs games, could be perhaps due to the fact that they play the Game unencumbered by a need to win them. Hence, unhappy fans who bully, pee and taunt.
Earnie Banks and Billy Williams are gods to Cubs fans. If Mr. Cub appeared during one of the Cubs major losing streaks, the racial barbs screamed at the players would be replaced by mindless cheering.
Losing is ugly and the language used during those times can be uglier.
so my point remains, would sox fans be more understanding of uncle miltie's average and lack of double digit hr production?
Philly is the worst. Atlanta right behind them.
The only difference is the complaining by underachieving athletes whose salaries get paid by guys making 45k working hard having to pay 12 pack prices for 8 ounces of warm awful tasting beer.
Let's look at the facts.
(1) All the players that were mentioned above are players who had exceptional years before coming to the Cubs, and proceeded to play very bad baseball with the Cubs. That's the reason for the taunts, not racism.
(2) Are there racist Cubs fans? Probably. When a team has millions of fans, it's a statistical certainty that some will be racists. This isn't limited to the Cubs, however. The White Sox have a small percentage of racist fans, as does every single team in baseball.
(3) Look at demographics. Cubs fans tend to be lakeshore liberals and north shore types. Hardly racist. I'd say that if you polled the attendance at Wrigley on a random day, the majority probably voted for President Obama.
Rich stated: ==Take a breath, doofus. I’m not the only one talking about this issue and asking that question. Plenty of others are as well.==
"Plenty of others" (who are morons) are asking the question about whether Obama was born in Kenya. Just because others are asking about it doesn't mean it isn't stupid.
You're doing something you rarely do, Rich. You're letting your personal bias tilt a story.
The fact is, most ballplayers are either black or latino. Is it possible that some of the drunk fans get racist? Sure. But I think it's more likely a bunch of whiny overpaid losers are looking for someone to blame for their own inadequacies.
And yes, I place Dusty "how dare Steve Stone criticize my players" Baker right up there on that list. In the meantime, sorry Rich, you're barking up the wrong tree on this one.
On the other hand, if Don Zimmer could have found a way to get Will Clark out more, the Cubs might never have hired Baker.
Win and we love you. Lose and you're a bum. I think Cubs fans are color blind, or at least equal opportunity critics, in that regard.
This is another ugly story in a season of bad news for my team. I wonder if the Ricketts are suffering buyer's remorse yet, knowing that Bradley is owed $20 million for two more years of this.
(also I hear that Derrick Lee hates him some kittens)
The question isn't about whether Sox fans would boo that underperforming player. I'm sure we would.
The question is about racism, doofus.
I don't agree, but whatever. It certainly wasn't my intent.
And disregarding a player's performance in the context of this discussion is not reasonable. All of the individuals you cite failed to meet expectations, and were consequently ripped by the fans. Omitting this item from consideration reinforces your bias against all things Cubs.
Not as easy as it sounds? Think again.
One year when the Cubs were playing at Sox Park before the game started a Cubs fan attending with a few Sox fans was heckling AJ who was out in the bullpen in left field. The guy kept at it and AJ gave it back to him. Then AJ slyly gave him the finger. This guy mistakenly thought this gave him the right to swear back at AJ. Not so. AJ pointed him out to security and said the guy was swearing at him and the guy was gone. His 3 friends who were Sox fans had an extra seat between them.
Try that a few times and the word in the bleachers will spread around that you could be gone with that behavior.
However, racist taunts are not the real measure of racism, which still exists but has gone "underground." That's why it's so shocking when people get caught blurting out slurs; people have more sense about saying that stuff in public, if only for their own self-preservation.
I have noticed a pattern of such Cubs players as Bradley and Hawkins being criticized more venomously than others who play poorly, and I do believe that racism plays a role in that; I also have no doubt that the players notice this heightened level of criticism, which may lead them to the same conclusion even if no blatant slurs are hurled.
However, while I don't follow the Sox, Phillies, or Red Sox, I have a hard time believing that this dynamic does not exist among their fans as well.
L.S. may be correct that bros drunk on privilege and Old Style (who are more numerous at Wrigley than at other parks) are giving Cub fans a bad name with heckling that crosses the line. But as a general proposition, I don't buy it; this post has more to do with tweaking Cub fans than reporting a legit story; Rich, you doth protest too much.
We're also talking about the hate mail reports, and the t-shirt stuff as well.
This has nothing to do with the question unless you are arguing that its ok to be racist if the player sucks.
Also, that was one guy. And guess where he started his drinking day? Cub Park.
If people won't go to Comiskey because of one goofy guy, then I don't want them there anyway.
Good point Rich. I was mainly thinking of at-the-game crowds.
===every single person I saw at the game was white.====
Bruce, I go to a fair number of games a year (15-20) and I would agree that a huge majority of the fans are white. But I do think it has gotten better from 10 years ago. The Sox use to just market to the corporate types and took the average neighborhood fan for granted. The last 7-8 years they have targeted the neighborhoods where their real fan base is and I think it shows. While that brings out the nuts from Alsip (sorry I had to throw that in) it also has brought a lot more minorities to the games because their kids became fans. A World Series title obviously helped out also.
FWIW, Kenny Williams who I consider to be one of the over all classiest and smartest people in baseball has said publicly that he has been the recipient of racial slurs. (And they weren't all from Frank Thomas.)
Those horrifically racist "horry cow" t-shirts and the fans wearing the karate kid style headbands.
At minimum, they don't even bother trying to hide the fact that they think that non-white people are funny looking, funny talking, less than human caricatures. And that's for the players they like. The fans mock and degrade their own players, even when they're still popular.
If they player doesn't meet expectations or plays for a rival, then it goes from mocking and degradation to outright hate.
==This has nothing to do with the question unless you are arguing that its ok to be racist if the player sucks.==
Sigh. STL, reread my post in its entirety, please, before you make questionable inferences.
I hear occasional boos, but no racial comments.
And I email Ozzie three or four times a year, usually commenting his starting pitchers. I kid him that Conseco is Minnie Minoso's older brother, and that the Sox shouldn't expect more than 65 pitches out of him even if he started just once a week. Ozzie gets a lot of racial crap in his emails, but he scans them all and he has responded to me, because I am always supportive and constructive as a 55 year Sox fan now living in Springfield.
I've only been to a total of 5 ball games in other cities and probably less than 20 at Comiskey so I can't compare. However, I do remember hearing racist taunts of visiting team players at the old comiskey. I have never heard that kind of language at Wrigley Field.
I don't think Cubs fans have ever jumped on the field and beaten the crap out of an umpire and the Royals first base coach - BTW.
Maybe, but a significant amount of Cubs fans (or rather people who show up for Cubs games) tend to be Big Ten, ex-frat types, who still can't understand why the "welfare queens/pimps and hos" themed exchange party that they threw in college was offensive. I wouldn't put it past an inebreiated frat boy from yelling out racist taunts in the bleachers, which is of course a lot different than the contemplation it takes to prepare racist fan mail...
It's like the Big Ten threw up all over the north side. Yeck.
That guy was a Cub fan.
I'll give a very recent example for you..... Gregg and Marmol are both ridiculed extensively and actively booed when they mess up in the relief/closer role (which is often). Gregg's white, Marmol's a Latino. I've been to games where both of them have blown it, and both times I haven't heard racism against either side whatsoever, they've just been flat out called pieces of ****.
Now, is that to say that there aren't Cubs fans who would go to a racial slur against Marmol whereas they wouldn't for Gregg? Of course not. However, those "fans" are very few and far between, and based off of my experience at Wrigley and Comiskey and a dozen other Major League, Minor League, Independent League, and college-level stadiums I've been to, they are no more frequent or less frequent really anywhere.
Bad players are especially ridiculed at Wrigley, and Bradley and just about everyone else mentioned has been bad. Same's true for white players, who have also been extensively booed. Same with Baker, who was hated for ruining pitchers and not managing the team very well in clutch situations, as is beginning to likewise happen slowly to Pinella and has happened to other managers like Riggleman.
When you look at the most beloved Cubs though, that tends to cross race. Santo and Banks, Maddux and Fergie, Sandburg and Sosa (IN HIS PRIME!), race matters not. Black, white, Asian, Latino, whatever, if you produce/try, you're loved at Wrigley. Last year, despite the "Horry Kow" shirts, Fukudome was praised left and right by fans when he was good. Now that he's slumping, not so much.
It's Chicago, folks. If you can't stand the heat, either play somewhere else or do good. Race has nothing to do with it.
We could speculate all we like, but nobody is going to know, unless we commission a cross-team public opinion poll. Or somebody could speak up, who has been to a lot of Cubs games (but such a person would probably be biased in the Cubs' favor). But even then, the question is, are Cubs fans _more_ racist than other fans ... so the same person would have to attend a lot of other teams' games as well.
We can speculate, but the only safe answer is nobody can be sure.
Then again, Boston is a much more racist city than Chicago.
... those Ozzie/Pujols mows my yard shirt are absolutely intolerable beyond anything else. Coming from someone's a Blackhawks fan, a huge supporter of Chief Illiniwek, and who thinks that the "Horry Kow" shirts are actually more cute than anything else, those shirts are completely inexcusable. The Blackhawks and the Chief are tradition and "Horry Kow" is a mildly distasteful throwback to a beloved broadcaster, but the lawnmowing shirts have no redeeming quality whatsover. Whenever I'm at Wrigley, I always shiver when I see those, and when I see someone wear them, there are anger pangs I feel that are only really surpassed when I see a moron in a pickup driving a car with a Confederate flag in the back.
Trust me when I say that that shirt does not stand for most Cubs fans.
You could do an anonymous, random survey of baseball players, like the Tribune did about five years back, and ask them which team has the most racist fans. Unfortunately that question wasn't asked in the 2004 survey; the Tribune asked things like, "What do you think is the best baseball stadium?" Which Wrigley Field won.
I haven't been to a Sox game in a while, Rich, but I would imagine that while alcohol consumption is a part of the experience on the south side, the pre-game drinking isn't as much of a tradition there as it is at Clark and Addison. Maybe that's just an assumed generalization, but it would make sense to me.
Take me out to the ball game
Hear the shouts of the crowd
Embarrassed by the nuts shouting racial cracks
I don't care if I ever go back
It's hate anyone
who is different
If we lose, they're to blame.
If they're brown, yellow or black then
We'll shout
an ugly racist name!
I have been in love with my Sox this year, and I had an awesome day attending a night game last month. Sat in the Patio, ate and drank, walked all around the Cell taking in the sights, and watching our team beat the Yanks in the bottom of the ninth. I saw Quinn with Buerle, and hung around the restricted area under the Cell and caught some autographs from the guys as they went by. We even got Derek Jeter's.
So it stinks when folks you think you share some commonality with, go all racist. It has always been an embarrassment with me. My schools were far away from the Midwest, so coming home and hearing some racial insults from supposedly college-educated "smart" people in the Loop stinks. I don't get it. I really don't understand.
My folks threatened to wash my mouth out if they ever heard anything racist. These words were on the dirty words list growing up.
It just sucks that this is a problem. It just shouldn't be.
Late in the game, Cleveland jumped out big time. A female, short dreadlocked, African-American, Cleveland fan stood up and cheered. The she turned around and gave it too the Sox fans who had been going back and forth all afternoon, nothing bad, just fun. She was in the 4th row. From somewhere behind us, all of a sudden we heard," Sit down and shut the F--- up Whoopi!". I turned to my wife and the kids that were with us and said, "Let's get our stuff together and start heading out."
I just feel, as others have said, that there is going to be a certain percentage of racist fans, no matter where you go. Look at Soccer in Europe, they have some awful problems with racist fans there. It's not just a U.S. problem, that doesn't make it any better.
I think part of the hoopla from outside of the Chicago area is people who don't know what has transpired in the past with Baker, Jones, Hawkins, etc, just can't believe that the loveable, cuddly Cubs fans would ever do anything like that.
(It's the Rod Blagojevich school of winning arguments)
http://chicago.cubs.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ym...
"I didn't hear any derogatory remarks," Williams said. "When you weren't swinging a bat real good -- and I didn't do that too often -- you'd hear people who would say things that you wouldn't appreciate. I was big enough at that time to let it slide over. The derogatory remarks, I didn't hear."
Hawkins, Baylor, Baker, Jones...all were failures on the field. I've attended hundreds of Cubs games and I have never heard a racial slur at Wrigley. I'm biracial. Does that mean it doesn't happen? No. Are there inappropriate t-shirts? Yes. Are they sold by the Cubs? No. They are sold by independent hawking vendors on the freaking corners outside.
As Steve Rosenbloom, a white man, accurately pointed out in the Rosenblog on chicagotribune.com, every fake cry of racism by someone takes credit and credence away from someone who actually faces racism.
For example:
=== Really??? - Friday, Aug 28, 09 @ 1:09 pm:
...
The fact is, most ballplayers are either black or latin===
I'm not sure what games you are watching (maybe old tapes of Negro Leagues), but as of the 2008 season, 8.2% of MLB rosters were of African-Americans. Now, the 1970s were a high-water mark for Black involvement on the field, with seasons floating between one-quarter and one-third Black players suited up. But MLB is making up for it with over one-quarter of front offices made up of Blacks (considering the on-field involvement of Blacks in previous decades, moving from on-the-field, to behind the bench, to in the suites, makes sense).
"But," you say, "this has nothing to do with Rich's original question."
Only so far as it is embedded with such loaded pejoratives and pre-conceived notions that must first be stripped away to address the elemental question: why is race still so problematically wedded to the National Pastime?
Probably for the same reason that it is so wedded to the rest of American life--old habits are comfortable.