The Home Team
Most of us are born to our allegiances. Especially for the home
team. Our fathers taking us to our first baseball game, the
perfectly manicured green grass and white on white of the
baselines so precisely laid out before us as giants warmed up
under the brilliant summer sun. From then to eternity that team
was mine. It binds us to a town a city, an era, it becomes who
we are, it defines us in ways beyond rational explanation. We
wear our loyalty in game jerseys with our hero's name emblazoned
on the back, we paint our faces our team's colors, we name our
children after our favorite players. We're crazy, crazy for our
team.
Win or lose, celebrate or mourn we love our team. Monday ain't
blue if your team won on Sunday. But we soon get over it if they
don't, because there is always next week, next year or if you
are a Cub fan, the next millennia. The best part of sport is
that there always is next year, a do over of sorts. One that
life doesn't provide us with, but does for our team. That's what
keeps us coming back for more. One more chance at redemption .
One more chance to be the best. To be champions. Everyone loves
a winner, but the true fan, one born of the loyalty of personal
connection, loves his team no matter what. There is no band
wagon to jump on or off of. They are your team through thick and
thin, win or lose.
I come from a time and place were loyalty was everything. At
work and at play. The team was everything. Whether it was your
sandlot buddies or the guys on the line at the assembly plant or
steel mill, it was your world, it was who you were, it was your
identity. I have lived, worked and played all over the world and
there is one constant that bonds males and it is sport. I have
played sandlot football in the shadow of hulking rusted steel
mills belching smoke and ash that coated the snow black. Stood
shoulder to shoulder with players from the other team as we
walked the length of the field picking and chucking rocks that
clanged off the empty aluminum bleachers. Then stood toe to toe
and knocked the crap outta each other for hours or until it got
too dark to play or we ran out of players. I have played
baseball on fields glistening with broken glass and basketball
on courts littered with hypodermic needles in the slums of
Philadelphia and New York and San Juan. I've kicked around
soccer balls in the hot sands of the Middle East with guys that
played in the World Cup from Holland. I sat, in a freezing car,
with four friends in Minneapolis listening to the U.S.A. beat
Russia in the '80 Olympics, on the radio because we forgot to
pay the electric bill. I've stood in race control at the 2000
Daytona 500 flashing hand signals to the broadcast crews who
couldn't understand why the race director had yellow flagged the
race toward the end of the race as 200,000 fans screamed in
anger or joy as their favorite got robbed or caught a break.
I've watched Superbowls, World Series games and World Cup
matches in bars from Bangkok to Bangor. I have partied with the
great and not so great, the famous and the infamous. I have been
fortunate to have traveled the world and it is the passion of
sport that has broken down language and cultural barriers along
the way. If there is one thing men are more passionate about
than religion or politics or women for that matter, it is sport,
especially the home team. Life long friendships born of the love
of sport are formed out of those passions. The internet and
forums like The Sports Outlaw have given us a place to show our
loyalty and passion to the whole world and to form more life
long friendships. Give me some peanuts and Cracker Jack, because
I'm going to root root root for the home team.