Results tagged “Cubs” from The Sports Desk
In an editors' meeting this morning, there was talk of doing a story about signs of Dodgersmania, and some of us remarked that there's never been so much excitement about a team taking a lead in a playoff series ... a first-round series ... against the Cubs.
But the more I think about it, the more I get it. At lunch, I looked around at the mostly young faces eating at the local Chipotle, and I realized how few people in that restaurant were alive the last time the Dodgers accomplished even this much. If you're under, what, 26 years old, you can't remember the Dodgers' victory in the 1988 World Series, and Kirk Gibson is just a name your dad says a little too often.
One great thing for young Dodgers fans today is that they've grown up in a time when rooting for a screwed up baseball team is portrayed as a badge of honor. The team is a bunch of "lovable losers," the fans are long-suffering, their frustration given religious significance. So kids have had that going for them, and now they get to enjoy the possibility that their club is shedding its history of October bumbling, the only history they've ever really known.
Must be something wrong with the phones in the Daily News' new offices. The past few days, I was getting calls from guys with Chicago accents complaining about Steve Dilbeck's columns making fun of Cubs fans. The callers said Steve obviously is jealous of Chicago's success this season, that being an L.A. guy he doesn't understand fans with real devotion, that he'd be embarrassed when the Cubs wiped the floor with the Dodgers. Strange, but no phone calls today, after the Wrigley Field fans booed the Cubs during the Dodgers' second one-sided victory. Must be something wrong with the phones.

Kevin Modesti watches sports from a new angle since his promotion from sports columnist to sports editor for the Los Angeles Newspaper Group. In his new blog, Modesti not only comments on the big sports stories of the moment-- he talks about what makes them big. Think of it as a conversation with readers about how these stories should be covered.


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