(Good grief, buy the damn thing! Or better: Give it to everybody you know as a Christmas gift!)
The New York baseball market is comprised of three angry tribes:
YANKGERS:
The dominant tribe, as of this writing. "Yankgers" is an acronym of Yankees-Giants-Knicks-Rangers – YGKRs – the
city’s oldest teams. At
any moment, the typical Yankger’s joyful recollection of Roger Clemens beaning
Mike Piazza in the 2000 World Series might segue into a weeping appreciation of
Lawrence Taylor, 15 years earlier, snapping Joe Theisman’s leg like a frozen
curly fry.
This fervor stems
from bloodlines. In many cases, the Yankees represent the first adopted team of
their ancestors, immigrants who celebrated their new life in America by
watching Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig kick the emerald green snot out of teams from
fancy-pants places like Baltimore and Washington. Between 1927 and 1962, Yankee
dynasties romanced New York’s Italian and Irish populations like a millionaire
industrialist sending pricy chocolates to a stripper. The Yankees became the
gateway drug to other New York franchises – starting with the football Giants.
In 1956, the Yankees and Giants both won world championships, inspiring New Yorkers to equate the two as looming dynasties. Both played in Yankee Stadium. Both retired uniform numbers by the bushel: (Ray Flaherty, No. 1; Tuffy Leemans, 4; Al Blozis, 32…) The Giants – behind Frank Gifford, Andy Robustelli and Sam Huff – seemed poised to become the Yankees of the NFL.
Then the
dice turned cold. The guts of the Giants, Vince Lombardi, jumped to Green Bay,
and the brains of the franchise, Tom Landry, skipped to Dallas. That left
clipboard of the team, Allie Sherman, to run the show. Between 1958 and 1963,
the Giants played in five NFL championship games – and lost every stinking one.
In the
1980s, the Giants again flirted with greatness. Behind Phil Simms, Joe Morris
and L.T., they won the 1986 Super Bowl. Unfortunately, the players went on
strike, and the owners broke the union like a certain Redskin quarterback’s
femur. The league imposed a revenue-sharing system designed to create what it
called “parity.”
Everyone
knows the NFL loves America. It reminds us constantly in sugary half-time shows
and United Way commercials. But the NFL’s owners do have one problem with the
United States:
Capitalism.
They hate
it.
The NFL is
the world’s leading communist organization.
Each spring, its worst teams draft highest, receive the weakest schedule, and sign players shed by the winners, due to a league enforced salary cap. In a perfect NFL season, every team goes 8-8, every player dresses alike, and every TV announcer flutters his hands like Terry Bradshaw. Thus, the league’s owners avoid their worst-case, nightmare scenario: An NFL version of the Yankees.
Each spring, its worst teams draft highest, receive the weakest schedule, and sign players shed by the winners, due to a league enforced salary cap. In a perfect NFL season, every team goes 8-8, every player dresses alike, and every TV announcer flutters his hands like Terry Bradshaw. Thus, the league’s owners avoid their worst-case, nightmare scenario: An NFL version of the Yankees.
As for the
other Yankger teams? When critics condemn New York fans for backing the rich,
powerful Yankees, they manage to ignore the tortured histories of the Rangers
and the Knicks. Sadly, Yankgers cannot do this.
DODGINTS: In the early 1900s, the New York Giants won three world championships
under John McGraw, arguably the First Coming of Billy Martin. They won again in
1933 and then in 1954, under Leo “the Lip” Durocher, the Second Coming of Billy.
Their mortal enemy, the Brooklyn Dodgers won just once – in 1955 – while losing
eight World Series, making them the
First Coming of the Redsocks. (In fact,
the B’s on their caps bore a striking resemblance.)
Both teams succeeded by signing African-American players, such as Willie
Mays and Jackie Robinson, long before the redneck-cracker Yankees woke up and acquired
the majestic oak tree that was Elston Howard. (By the way, that disgraceful lag in morality cost us at least three
world championships. Imagine Larry Doby in the Yankee lineup of 1954. Also,
Boston could have ended its “curse” 50 years earlier, if not for racial
foot-dragging.)
In the winter of 1957, the Dodgers and Giants abruptly skipped to
California.
If it happened today, the National Guard would be deployed. Effigies would
burn, lawyers would sue, and elderly white mobs in tea party costumes would march
on Washington. The anger would have a name: Coast
Traumatic Stress Disorder. But in the Nytol era of Dwight D. Eisenhower,
the masses were too newly mesmerized by TV to mount an insurgency. They didn’t have a team, but they could watch
Milton Berle dress in drag.
Fans of the Giants and Dodgers faced a hellish choice: Keep rooting for
the teams that betrayed them, whose games now started after 10 o’clock each
night, or support the franchise they hated more than they hated life itself –
the Yankees.
So were spawned Dodgints, Yankee
fans created by the Great Dodgers/Giants Treachery of 1957.
Inside every Dodgint lurks a cork-popping rage that must be directed at
somebody – anybody – but preferably a Met or Redsock. They cannot explain this anger
any more than an emperor penguin can describe life outside Antarctica. They’re
always ready to detonate. They always want to fight. The craziest Dodgints are
the children of those who kept rooting for the Dodgers or Giants, like google-eyed
zombies milling around a shopping a mall. They refused to sign up for baseball’s
version of a methadone clinic, the Mets. In fact, Dodgints view Met fans the
way that brown ants view red ants: They want to squeeze them with their
pinchers, until the tiny heads explode.
Dodgints constantly fume. They want every Yankee manager fired, every Yankee
pitcher pulled. They want the cleanup hitter to bat third, but they also want
him traded. The Yankees can be leading 13-0, but if a star hitter strikes out
with runners on base, their whole night is ruined. They love the Yankees. They
hate the Yankees. They’d rather finish 20 games out than lose the World Series
in seven games on a humpback blooper. They fear every Redsock acquisition, even
players the Yankees wouldn’t touch with a laser pointer. They want every free
agent. They want every game, every at bat, every pitch. They want the season
over, as soon as possible.
Publicly, they scorn juju.
Privately, they are the most obsessive practitioners ever known. They
weigh every subconscious movement for its impact on the team. Some may even dream
juju in their sleep.
They never find peace. They never experience joy, except for the moments
immediately following a Yankee win. It lasts until Frank Sinatra finishes “New
York, New York.” Then the shakes return.
I am a Dodgint.
NYETS: The polar opposites to Yankgers, Nyets take
their name from the New York Mets, Jets, and Nets, and flourish mostly in areas
of weed-whacked Suburbia and its ancient holy land, Long Island.
Why there? The Mets and Jets played at Shea Stadium in Flushing, and the
Jets for years practiced at Hofstra University, in Hempstead. The New Jersey
Nets’ glory years occurred as the New York Nets, playing in Nassau Coliseum. In
hockey, the Islanders are, well, Islanders.
Nyets believe in the power of love, the magic of nature and the
greatness of God. They generally abstain from juju. As a result, their teams have
suffered.
Met fans watched as the great Tom Seaver was run out of town by the
blowhard tabloid sportswriter Dick Young. They watched little Lenny Dykstra go
to Philadelphia and plump-up into a steroidal-rage behemoth. They saw Doc
Gooden and Darryl Strawberry resurrected as Yankees. In 2007, they watched
their team blow a 7-game lead with 17 games left, the kind of meltdown that
ended nuclear power in the Ukraine. In recent years, they’ve watched one of their
last icons, Keith Hernandez, hawk hair coloring. He couldn’t snag a Viagra contract.
Jet fans had to witness the transformation of Joe Namath from World’s
Coolest Bachelor to a shaky old groper of waitresses. They suffered the
indignity of playing home games in Giants
Stadium. In 2000, after head coach Bill Parcells resigned, they watched his
handpicked successor – future Patriots’ legend Bill Belichick – quit after one day. He scribbled his resignation on
a napkin: “I resign as HC of the NYJ.”
Nets fans? Let’s just say that, through their first 30 years, they never
watched an NBA championship game that they were playing in.
Even when touting his team, a Nyet’s head will shake, as if to say, “Yeah, I don’t believe me either.” They
claim to disdain violence, but beneath every dinner table, the Nyet is choking a
napkin with his or her bare hands. In dreams, they are dousing Mr. Met with
gasoline and striking a match on Bernie Madoff’s stubbled chin.
Many Nyets yearn to flee Long Island. But to the west, they face a city swarming
with Yangkers and Dodgints, hungry for the chance to shred a David Wright
jersey into animal bedding. New Jersey won’t accept them; it’s still pissed
about the Nets. If they go North, they will find Redsock fans still seething
over the 1986 World Series. (If the
Yankees ever fall, "METS SUCK!" will quickly become Fenway’s favored
chant.)
If they move to – say – Ohio, they face the obvious questions: You’re from New York? Why aren’t you a
Yankees fan? These days, a Met fan turning up in Toledo will trigger calls
to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.
Singer Marc Anthony is a Met fan.
His wife, Jennifer Lopez, roots for the Yankees.
When Nyets inbreed, a mutation often results. See that bearded guy
standing on Broadway, wearing a Mets cap and Minnesota Vikings jersey? What
caused him to support a team from a city he only knows from reruns of “The Mary
Tyler Moore Show?” What happened to him? And do you really want to know?
The Russians have a one-word answer. Nyet.
1 comment:
I really want to kiss you right now!!
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