LeBron Takes (a) Charge... |
There are lots of teams I don't like. Whether it's due to a historical rivalry with a San Francisco team, a particularly venal ownership, a loathing for a specific player or just a knee-jerk dislike for the organization, by this point in my life all the teams that play major league sports that I like to watch exist on a continuum of hatred. With some it burns with the fire of a thousand suns, while with others I just get slightly irritable and toss out the occasional desultory insult. But the net result is, when watching games that do not include the Giants or the Forty Niners, I find that I am actually rooting against a particular outcome rather than for a team to win.
Which brings us to the recently concluded NBA playoffs this year. I usually don't watch regular season NBA games - at most, watching the last five minutes, which takes half an hour, is sufficient - but I really enjoy the playoffs. The seven game series' develop a narrative all their own, and each game either changes or reinforces that narrative in a way I find fascinating. And this year, the finals were everything I could have wished for. Oklahoma City, an almost likable small market team, with the shy Durant, the fiery Westbrook and Harden's fabulous beard, against the detestable bullies, the Yankees of the NBA, the Miami Heat with the gifted but arrogant LeBron, the eternally unhappy Wade and the Camp Follower Bosh.
Going in, I really thought OKC would win. Miami had a history of falling apart in the bright lights, and OKC had so much talent up and down the bench that it would be a case of 8-on-3 for 48 minutes and hey, you take the 8 every single time, right? Well, so much for that line of reasoning. Don't think so much, you'll only hurt the ball club.
So it was kind of painful to watch, and it certainly wasn't an outcome that left me laughing and celebrating, but there was something kind of enjoyable and uplifting watching LeBron James finally growing into the shoes he's been trying to wear for seven years. It has always made for the best of sports drama to watch someone who just simply refuses to lose. So, with the NBA finals at long last behind us, we have the Olympics up next and then baseball's stretch run. And there is no televised sporting event more fun than September baseball...
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And there is no televised sporting event more fun than September baseball...
ReplyDeleteunless you're a Brewers fan, that is.
Fortunately, I don't actually count myself as such, after Selig ripped us off for 400 million dollars.
Brando, of course, did not have any investment in WHO won the NBA finals, after he lost his wager in the beginning of the playoffs; rather, he was just hoping it would end as SOON AS POSSIBLE. (If you were not privy, his buddy won a wager that they had to wear a shirt of the other's choice as Facebook profile pic for the extent of the playoffs; Brando lost and had to wear, as he put it, "a girl's pink and while satin Philly jersey. A girl's MEDIUM, at least two cup sizes too small and fifty pounds beyond safe maximum inflation".) The LOLs are now over.
Some wagers are nothing short of irresponsible...
ReplyDeleteI watched golf on Sunday. Haven't turned the telebision on since.
ReplyDelete~
Honest to gawd, I haven't turned mine off since Sunday.
DeleteOh fuck, not the Olympics.
ReplyDeleteI never watched basketball until I had a large enough set to follow the ball (& I climbed on the Lakers' bandwagon) but even w/ a big HD screen I still can't get into hockey.
I was surprised when I watched the one full game of hockey I watched this season. It really worked on me. I'm not sure why, because shit not given really...maybe it was being in a crowd of people with crossed fingers.
ReplyDeleteHockey's pretty fast-paced. And they don't break for a zillion minutes of commercials alla time.
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That's another reason why baseball it the perfect sport for television. They don't have arbitrary commercial breaks - they happen between innings and during pitching changes, and then for a brief, proscribed length of time.
DeleteAfter years of watching baseball on TeeVee, you develop a perfect rhythm, going to the bathroom, getting snacks, refilling your cocktails, even doing a certain subset of household chores that can be broken up into a series of small, discrete actions. You never have to actually WATCH the commercials, but you never have to miss any of the game either.
Perfect...