You have these expectations. Maybe they’re inbred. Or you are inexorably conditioned to them. As an ex-patriot Canadian, but a Canadian
nonetheless, I have the recollection of believing that spring was just around
the corner. And then it snowed again.
It does something
to you, that perennial disappointment.
It instills a “Canadian Mindset” –
An indomitable certainty of the worst.
Which, although I have now resided in a country maintaining
an indomitable certainty of the best
for more than forty years…
I continue to possess.
Listen to this story.
Baseball’s Toronto
Blue Jays held the record in all the major sports – baseball, football,
hockey and lacrosse – wait that’s Indigenous People’s wishful thinking – and
basketball – as being the team experiencing the longest “dry spell” without advancing
to the postseason.
This season, the Jays
finally got into the playoffs.
My immediate reaction?
That’s not going
to last.
And it looks early on like I’m right. Toronto drops the first game at home with
their best pitcher on the mound. Then
the second game, also at home – which makes a difference because teams playing
at home enjoy a demonstrable “Home team Advantage” (e.g.: the Blue Jays were a league-leading 53-28 at
home during the regular season) – the Jays
lose again, this time in 14 innings, proof, if the “Canadian Mindset” needs any
– which it doesn’t – of the team’s perilous inability to “close the deal” when
it really matters.
Okay. Down 2 games to
0 in a “Best-of-Five” series and we’re going to Texas. Did I mention they were playing the Texas Rangers? I probably didn’t. Because it’s doesn’t matter; the outcome will
inevitably be the same. Oh, and did you
notice I said “We’re going to
Texas?” That was entirely spontaneous.
Implication:
This is really going to hurt.
Even if it’s expected.
The next day is Sunday.
(Two days ago.) I check the time
for when “Game 3” is on television, and then turn to C-Span to watch a lecture delivered by a “white-collar” miscreant
who spent a year in prison and wrote a book about it. I then wade through a program on how American
presidents affect fashion – remember the “Eisenhower Jacket”? – awaiting the
second offering of a much anticipated series on landmark cases from the Supreme
Court. Which never comes on, the program
apparently airing on an entirely different day, the original offering
misleading me because it was broadcast the previous Sunday. And nobody warned me that that was not the
show’s regular time slot. (Does this
sound like an old person talking?)
Suddenly, I remember the game I switch immediately to the
appropriate channel. Where I am greeted
by a scene of celebrating Rangers
players congratulating each other out on the field.
The game has just been completed. (I had missed it.) Texas has swept the series. (Baseball players never congratulating each
other when they lose.)
Well, there you go.
“Three and out.” The Blue Jays are finished. The game’s summarizing “line score” flashes
on the screen. The Jays have once again been bested in fourteen innings.
Which is impressive, in a way. Losing two fourteen-inning games in a
row. That shows tenacity. It shows grit.
The Jays of 2015:
Gritty but gone.
(Blue Jays loyalists are likely – make that
certainly – ahead of me at this point.
(Or earlier.) As are readers with
more sense in their heads than I have.
Although keep in mind, I am afflicted by “The Canadian Mindset.”) (And residual Legionnaires’ Disease.) (How long can I milk that one?)
I switch away from the game station. Why would I continue to watch, to see a team
I don’t care about in goggles squirting champagne at each other in the
clubhouse? Who beat my team that is now free to go fishing and play golf? No way!
That night, after watching a PBS offering of Whitechapel
– about a Jack-the-Ripper “copycat” wreaking murderous havoc in current day East
London – I switch over to the MLB (Major League Baseball) station for a
report on the playoffs. My
disappointment sufficiently salved by the passage of time, I am ready for a commentarial
rehashing of the Blue Jays ouster
from the playoffs.
And what do I discover, to my utter shock and amazement?
The Blue Jays won
“Game Three.”
“Say, what?”
Why then did I believe the opposite?
Here’s why.
The game whose congratulatory ending I had witnessed had
been a replay of the fourteen-inning game in Toronto broadcast prior to beginning
of “Game Three” in Texas. (Which I
should have immediately realized because the Rangers congratulating each other out on the field were wearing
their gray, “away” uniforms, and the field they were congratulating each other
on was the Rogers Centre.)
Do you see what happened there?
Stupidity, of course.
But a stupidity fueled…
by “The Canadian Mindset.”
(Or “The Pomerantz Family Mindset.”
Or it is just me.)
I expected them to lose so could easily imagine that they did.
When, in actuality, they won.
This gives a glimmering insight into the way things work.
It is not “Hope for the best, expect the worst” from The Twelve Chairs.
You assume the worst.
And that’s it!
What happens now that there is a renewed chance of a
positive outcome?
Paraphrasing Lou Grant, though considerably less artfully,
“I hate renewed chances
of positive outcomes!”
There is now a possibility that they might actually win!
What am I supposed to do with that!?!
Eh?
Oh, well.
There is always the Leafs
to let me down.
And the world will be right back to normal.
I was all ready to write a comment about your mistaken belief that the Jays had lost game 3 but I kept reading anyway (you have real power over us, Earl) and found that you now know your Jays did win after all. And not only that but, as I hope you know, they won again last night. So, they're heading north again for the final game.
ReplyDeleteThat doesn't mean you can't be pessimistic but isn't it nice to still have a team in the playoffs? I grew up in Pittsburgh (out in a one game playoff) and now live on Cape Cod (Red Sox country and we weren't even close to the playoffs) and I have no one to root for.
Don't forget - Wednesday afternoon - 4 pm Eastern Time, 1 pm Pomerantz Time
The Leafs won't disappoint - they WILL let you down. That is a certainty.
ReplyDelete1 pm, Pacific, tomorrow. Go Jays!
ReplyDeleteThe Blue Jays are the only Toronto team all of Canada cheers for since the Leafs are such a great longstanding joke, eh.
ReplyDelete