There are goats, and then there are goats. The Chicago Cubs are habitual with both varieties. The first, I guess, would be the brute variety. Those who separate anything about the Cubs (and baseball in general) recollect all about the dreaded Curse of the Billy Goat.
It began when a tavern holder was kicked out of Wrigley Field because his darling goat was bothering other patrons. The celebrity goes that his adieux words were, "Them Cubs, they aren't gonna realize no more." That was back in 1945, and age has proven him wise.
Most Cubs fans will inform you that the other amiable of goat has a lot to do with that. That compassionate of goat would be the scapegoat. The Cubs have one of these as well, and his select is Steve Bartman. He was the customer who interfered with Moises Alou's strive to gather a uncouth ball in Game 6 of the 2003 National League Championship Series.
The Cubs went on to give up the stratagem and the series, and it was seemingly all Bartman's fault. Bartman is certainly not tout in the beat dukedom of great baseball goats (of the second-best variety). He has often been compared to quondam Boston Red Sox great (?) Bill Buckner, who infamously booted a earth ball in Game 6 of the 1986 World Series that allowed the Curse of the Bambino to loaded on.
Well, that and Calvin Schiraldi's pitching and Bob Stanley's wildness. At any rate, the fantastic correlation between Bartman and Buckner has come to fluorescence again thanks to the unheard of 30 for 30 documentary about Bartman entitled Catching Hell. I haven't seen it yet, but I advised Buckner features prominently-because, you know, we must be reminded that these two are strangely correlated. This is not to imagine I have a uncontrollable with the pic itself, reason you.
I am forever liable to Alex Gibney, the film's director, for his motion picture about Hunter S. Thompson, and I heard he did relatively well with Catching Hell, too. Instead, my bleat is with the correlation itself. That these two guys are customary to forever be labeled as goats is foul enough. Joining them at the hep is even worse.
All you have to do is reckon the circumstances in which they became goats. Let's shrink with Buckner. As unfairly as he was later treated by the fans and the media, it must be acknowledged that Buckner should have fielded Mookie Wilson's prepare ball up the anything else unseemly line. We can argot all we want about irritable hops and about how Buckner shouldn't have been out there in the key place, but the fait accompli of the upset is that fielding instruct balls was in his berth memoir at the time.
He didn't warrant all of the place for the loss, but he certainly fair some of it. As for Bartman, the one object that has always struck me about his presumed conflict with Alou is that he did surely nothing wrong. All he did was barrow up and act to a baseball that was ticketed for his generalized vicinity.
Even if he'd in some way known that Alou was also ticketed for his catholic vicinity, there's unqualifiedly no modus operandi he was prevalent to create himself to overrule his underlying reactionary instincts. Who's the bigger goat?
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