Okay, this is weird.
I am watching the tail end of a Yankees/Padres game that I don’t care about, waiting for the start
of a Dodgers-Mets game that I do.
I don’t recall the specifics – as I was just killing time –
but suddenly, as they mounted a rally in
the ninth and last inning,
I found myself, rooting for the Padres.
For no explainable reason, I was hoping the Padres would win. A team from San Diego. Whose dominant “Team Color” is brown.
Think about that. A
game I was watching, only because the game I intended to watch had not started.
And there I am, (silently) chanting, “Let’s go, Padres!”
Yes, I resented the Yankees
since they swaggered to two “unearned” World
Series wins against the superior Dodgers
back in the 70’s. But was that really a reason? A fifty year-old grudge against a Yankees contingent, now retired, and in
some cases, passed on?
Apparently, it is.
Raising the more general
question,
Can I not watch a game without reflexively rooting for one
team?
In my personal experience,
“No.”
The proclivity of rooting is more than “Let’s make the game interesting”, a reason for upping
the “ante” in an uninteresting card game.
It’s like something inside me – and maybe others as well – makes picking
a side an inseparable component in the game-watching procedure.
Consider the evidence.
(By which I mean mine. But we can
extrapolate, can’t we?)
When the Dodgers
were in the World Series against the victorious
‘77 and ’78 Yankees, I had lived in
Los Angeles, counting from ‘77, less than three years. Which, you will, agree is not a particularly
long time.
Yet there I am, screaming my lungs out when Yankees’ Reggie Jackson brazenly stuck
out his hip – changing the course of the Series
– and was not immediately called “Out” for “Deliberate Inference.” I mean, three years, and I go nuts over a “blown
call”, punishing “My team”?
How were they suddenly “My team”? L.A.
With its smothering smog and its hideous traffic, where, five weeks
after my arrival, the LAPD, looking
for Patti Hearst, burned down a house, with five people inside it?
I’m rooting for that?
The process of rooting, which makes no reasonable sense, is as
illogical as it is seemingly mandatory. I
mean, what are we talking about? The
players constantly switch teams. Almost
none of them come from the places they play for. The one reliable “constant” are the
uniforms.
We are not rooting for people.
We are rooting for their shirts.
I pity the fans, supporting minor league ball clubs like the
Lehigh Valley IronPigs and the Amarillo Sod Poodles. They can’t help it. Whatever the logo, sensible people are screaming,
“Go, Sod Poodles!!!”
Savoring the “highs.”
Suffering through Sod
Poodle defeats.
We seem viscerally “programmed” to root, automatically when
it’s about nothing – such as the Padres – more rabidly passionately when
it’s about something. Which had me thinking about that today.
I write this earlier that day, so I do not know the outcome,
but starting last night, the Toronto
Raptors – representing my actual hometown,
whose local constabulary, to my knowledge, never incinerated a house with five
people in it – made their maiden “NBA
Finals” appearance, against the Golden
State Warriors.
Which is exciting.
Except, backing the Raptors?
That is really going to hurt.
Having appeared in the finals in each of the past four
seasons – winning three of those four consecutive appearances – the Golden State Warriors are the anointed
“Team of the Century.” While the Toronto Raptors, if they were lucky last
night, are, at best, “The team of That Thursday.”
What can I tell you?
I have to pull for Toronto.
I may pretend I don’t care. (Due
to the calamitous “mismatch”, I need emotional “armor” to withstand the
inevitable.) But deep down, I shall root
for hopefully the Raptors.
Why?
Because they’re my Sod
Poodles.
And I don’t have a choice.