In both hockey and basketball, they are currently winding up the playoffs. Sometime in June – long after
their seasons should naturally have been over but the leagues’ insatiable
hunger for money requires them to play forever – there will be a winner, after
which the players will be interviewed, the questions to them primarily related to
how they did it.
I believe I am a moderately knowledgeable sports fan. But, though I have watched my fair share of
championship encounters, I can rarely ascertain what exactly it was that led to
one team’s prevailing over the other.
Unless it’s a blowout, in which case I just assume that the winning team
was better. It is noteworthy, however,
that even under those circumstances, that
explanation is never offered by the winning team’s players.
“Why did we win?
Weren’t you watching the game?
They sucked!”
You never hear that.
More likely, it’s…
“They’re a good team.
We just peaked at the right moment.”
I imagine they say that stuff out of respect for the other
team, though their responses show minimal respect for the viewership, who had just
witnessed the shellacking with their own eyes and knew that “peaking at the
right moment” was hardly the determinative factor.
I am thinking more about a confrontation between two evenly
matched adversaries, where the winning team pulls it out by the slightest of
margins. In an effort to comprehend what
exactly that takes, let us examine the responses most frequently articulated by
the players on the winning team, rationalizing why they won (accompanied by the
parenthetical rebuttals of a player, utterly bewildered by the reasons that his team lost.)
“We stuck to the ‘Game Plan.’ And it led us to victory.”
(“We stuck to the
‘Game Plan.’ And it led us to defeat!”)
“We left it out on the field.”
(“Where do you think we
left it – at Burger King?)
“We have a lot of great guys on this team.”
(“Our team full of great guys. Except for one guy. But he happens to be our best player.”)
“We busted our butts out there.”)
"We busted our butts out there."
(“We busted our
butts and our humps. We actually
busted more stuff than they did!”)
“We play the game ‘The Right Way.’”
(“Like we play it
‘The Wrong Way’? Okay, once
I dribbled the basketball with my nose.
But I was just kidding around.”)
“I give credit to my Dad.
He always pushed me to excel.”
(“My Dad pushed me
to excel. Until my mother called the
police.”)
“We committed ourselves from the first day of Training
Camp.”
(“We did too. Except
for that day when it was really hot.
Could that one day have really made all the difference?”)
“I always dreamed about winning the championship.”
(“I did too. All
right, not always. Sometimes, I dreamed
about girls. But I'll bet they did too.")
“We gave it a hundred-and-ten percent.”
(“Okay, there you got me.
We only gave it a hundred-and-seven
percent. We kicked it up near the end –
We gave it a hundred-and-twelve
percent. I don’t know, I guess a steady
hundred-and-ten beats an intermittent hundred-and-twelve.”)
Okay, that’s enough meaningless quotes, although I am
certain there are more of them.
Including, “The Good Lord was on our side”, which I don’t want to get
into, because, “Believer” or not, it is disturbing to imagine a Supreme Being
who would choose to take time off from ruling over the Universe to root for a
specific sports team. I’m just…staying
out of that whole thing.
Listening to the un-illuminating, post-game commentary, I
cannot help thinking that, deep down, the winning players may not actually know why they won. So they say the things that make sense because
they won, things that the losing players could just as easily have said but they would not
have made sense because they lost.
“We left it out on the field.”
“And you still lost?
“Yeah. Go figure.”
The winners won.
Though it seems possible they are not entirely sure why. So they say stuff that
would have been equally appropriate for the losers to say, but they don’t,
owing to its inconsistency with the outcome.
Who knows?
Maybe the winning players do know why they won.
They just don’t want to tell me.
Too paranoid?
Perhaps.
But that does not mean it’s wrong.