As this calendar year winds down I'm starting to reflect on just how much has happened during this year 2007. It seems like such a long time ago now, but I started this blog back in January, and my first post was about how miffed I was that the Chargers were upset by the Patriots in the Playoffs. At that point 2007 was just getting started, and none of us knew what this year held in store for us. Looking back on it all, there were some sports moments in 2007 that I really enjoyed, but just about all of them ended disappointingly.
Let's start with football. I experienced something this year that I never have before: I got to follow my team, the Chicago Bears, from the first game of the season all the way to the Super Bowl. I was surrounded by co-workers who only wanted to talk about the Cowboys and Redskins, but I always stood up for my Bears in football discussions. Once the Playoffs started one of my friends told me that they'd never make it to the Super Bowl with Rex Grossman at quarterback, but the Bears did me proud by proving all the doubters wrong. Unfortunately, the Bears lost to the Colts in the Super Bowl. It wasn't an ideal ending, but the season had been a great ride and there was reason to be hopeful about the future. As it's turned out, the Bears this season have been hurt by injuries and a dismal offense. They're going to finish with a losing record, and it's clear that several changes need to be made if this team is going to return to contention. The best thing you can say about the 2007 Bears was that they beat the Packers twice.
Super Bowl XLI now looks like a missed opportunity that the Bears may not get again for some time, but interestingly enough, it was also the biggest highlight of 2007 for me. I figured if the Bears were going to lose, it might as well be to a team that deserved the title. The Indianapolis Colts were most certainly that. Despite my team's loss, I was happy for the Colts. After having a very good team for so many years they finally got their hands on the Lombardi Trophy, and they did it with class. It was also nice to see the deluded New England fans who liked to say that Peyton Manning would never win the big one and who just couldn't accept the idea that he wasn't a born loser have to eat their words. I'll admit, that part made me feel good too.
In addition to the Bears' struggles, this NFL season has been pretty miserable for me. All five teams I hate (Patriots, Packers, Steelers, Giants and Cowboys) are in the Playoffs. The Patriots are close to going undefeated, but they've had a dark cloud of contempt surrounding them from day one. I'm forced to root for one of those teams I hate in their last game of the season in hopes that the evil Patriots won't pull it off. The Detroit Lions, a true underdog that would've made a great feel-good story, started out the season 6-2 and now could finish with a losing record. The only hope left for lovers of underdog franchises is the Cleveland Browns, who still haven't clinched a Playoff spot. Ultimately though, the only teams that look like they have a realistic shot of winning anything this year are teams whose fanbases have experienced the top of the hill recently enough that they have no underdog appeal. In the end I think it's likely that several of us will be picking a team to root for by figuring out which one we hate the least.
Then there was basketball. As a Bulls fan I was pretty excited when my team swept the defending champion Miami Heat in the first round of the Playoffs. The Heat were treated like a team with some magical formula for stepping up when it counted all season, but the Bulls dispelled that notion in four games. Having followed the Bulls through the post-Jordan years I was proud of those guys. They nearly got swept in the next round by the Pistons, but they hustled their way to two wins before bowing out in Game 6. It would've been nice to see them go farther in the Playoffs, but considering the progress they'd made it was nothing to be ashamed of. Like the Bears, it gave us fans a lot of hope for next season.
We're about two months into "next season" now and things haven't gone as expected. The Bulls have gotten off to slow starts each of the past three seasons, but they've always managed to get it together before too long. This time though, they've stretched out their poor start long enough that Scott Skiles has been fired as head coach and most people already consider this season to be a lost cause. I haven't completely given up on this Bulls team, but I think it's safe to say that even if they do turn things around and make the Playoffs they don't have what it takes to go very far once they get there. It's sad to see a team that started out as a favorite to win the East possibly headed to the draft lottery.
As for the rest of the basketball world, the San Antonio Spurs won their fourth NBA Championship in 2007. The Spurs are one of the most nondescript teams in the NBA. They win championships, but they don't inspire much emotion. The Phoenix Suns, a team that has been on the doorstep of NBA supremacy in recent years, had a chance to beat them in the second round of the Playoffs, but the Spurs ultimately prevailed. It left the Spurs as the only dominant team in the Playoffs and the almost inevitable champion. While I'm not a big LeBron James fan, I was rooting for the Cleveland Cavaliers in the NBA Finals, since they'd never been there and the Spurs had. It wasn't even close, as the Spurs swept. When the Spurs won their first NBA Championship in 1999 it was exciting, as several players got their first rings and no former ABA team had ever even made it to the NBA Finals. Every championship they've won since then has been completely anticlimactic. It's like watching a computer win a chess game against a human opponent. This season the Spurs are again looking like the best in the West, while the team that's stepped it up in the East is the Celtics, from the dreaded city of Boston. Out of nowhere they acquired two All Stars in Kevin Garnett and Ray Allen, giving their ever-obnoxious fans something else to boast about. The Pistons and Magic right now are looking like our only hopes not to have to see them in the NBA Finals.
Of course, there was still the greatest game in the world, baseball. 2007 brought me higher hopes than usual in baseball, only to end with me watching them get crushed successively. First there were my Cubs. They hadn't won the World Series since 1908, but all season they showed flashes of brilliance that gave the optimist in me hope the it could finally be "the year." They made the Playoffs with a mediocre 85-77 record, but as the Cardinals had proven the year before, just getting into the Playoffs is the important thing. Once you're in, anything can happen. After the Cubs fought their way into the postseason, it was as if someone suddenly cut off their supply of "heart" just before they faced the Diamondbacks in the Divisional Series. They seemed completely uninspired throughout the series, and the Diamondbacks swept. In a matter of days all the optimism among Cub fans had turned to disgust.
With the Cubs out of the picture, I decided to pull for another team that had been waiting a long time for "the year": the Cleveland Indians. They hadn't won the World Series since 1948, and they had beaten the hated New York Yankees in the first round. Unlike the Cubs, the Indians had tied for their league's best record, and they looked like they had a real shot at winning the World Series. They went up against another evil Boston team, the Red Sox. They managed to take a 3-1 lead in the series despite some struggles from their best starters, and it seemed as if destiny was on their side. Then it all came crashing down. The Red Sox destroyed them in the next three games to win the pennant and deprive the baseball world of a potentially great story. It didn't help that many members of the irksome "Red Sox Nation" showed a complete lack of class in victory.
I was pretty upset about the Indians having their title as AL Champs usurped by that evil team from America's Most Annoying City, but there was still a glimmer of hope going into the World Series. The Colorado Rockies had spent most of the season playing at a level just below contention, but they'd finished on a tear that took them all the way to the NL pennant. They'd won 21 of their last 22 games going into the World Series, and they were the only team in the NL that looked like a legitimate threat against the superior American League. I loved watching their run, as I'd considered the Rockies one of my "side" teams for years. Unfortunately, they were just starting to cool down as the Red Sox were hitting their stride. The Red Sox swept, and for the first time in my life three teams I'd really embraced lost in one postseason.
I suppose the best way to sum up 2007 in sports would be a year that teased me with the hope of great things to come and ended up as a morass of Boston egotism and the same old teams winning. I'm just glad I've started to follow hockey, as it's been my only refuge in the midst of the disastrous sports scene we're currently surrounded by. I just hope 2008 is better than 2007 was. I don't know if I can take two consecutive years like this one.
I just have to wonder how many Spurs games you have actually watched. How anyone can watch a team with Parker and Ginobli and call them nondiscript or like a computer is beyond me.
These are two of the most exciting young players in the league. Good Lord, some of the moves Manu makes to get to the basket just defy physics. And Parker can slash his way to the basket like no on in the league.
And I won't even discuss Duncan. His play speaks for itself.
And they have a whole crew of guys who can hit the three.
I guess defensive basketball is not your thing.
Let's face it, if these guys were playing in LA, NY, or Chicago, no one would be calling them boring. Everyone would be touting them as greatest exciting team ever. You find them boring because they are not your team.
If you had not been told they were boring, would you find them so. I doubt it.
Spurcse - I can think for myself. I don't think the Spurs are boring because someone told me to think that. Didn't I say their first title was exciting?
What I'm saying is that the Spurs have neither underdog appeal nor personalities that make you want to root for them. When a team contends as consistently as the Spurs do there's no drama if they win the title. We already know they're good. I'd rather see an underdog or a team with something to prove win it. A Spurs title is like a recycled script. You feel like you've seen it all before.
One thing I'll say for the Spurs is that they are developing a bit of a reputation as villains after they were accused of being dirty in last year's Playoffs. Perhaps it's for the best, since people will now be able to respond to them emotionally.
I'm right there with you on the Patriots and the odious Red Sox Nation. Perhaps I should go with "odiferous" - we're talking about socks, after all.
The first half of 2008 could either provide sweet relief, or intensify the downward spiral. I could easily see the Patriots losing in Foxborough if it snows - either the Colts(!) or the Jaguars could mount a much more effective rushing game. So there's hope. On the other hand, if the Celtics win the NBA, I'm not sure instruments exist to measure the unprecedented levels of obnoxious that will emanate from Bahston.
As a cubs bears and phoenix suns fan, i relate greatly with this blog...however, as a sun fan i despise spurs basketball but more spurs fans...its like these guys cannot see the forrest from the trees...are you so blind to see that your team winning the championship again is quite possibly the worst thing to happen to the almost irrelevent NBA!!
God i hope the patriots lose - thats one team i despise over all else - yes even those spurs - Patriots, just friggen lose...PLEASE
The cubs got rid of Prior - thats a great step in the right direction - wood looked decent in the playoffs and Z will be dominate next year...we also picked up an asian player with an explitive for a last name who can supposidly hit the ball well...now all we need to do is get rid of the tribune company and hopefully selig will allow Cuban to pick up the cubs and turn it into the best team in baseball and make the yankees look cheap.
Moving on to the bears - OMG our O Line is awful, thank god we beat the packers twice this year, and PLEASE for the love of god draft Dennis Dixon out of Oregon or another QB phenom who can run and pass - with our O line our QB needs to be mobile - get rid of Rex..please get rid of rex hes a freaking mistake...and why the F did we get rid of Jones over Benson - anybody on the streets of chicago could of told you who the better RB was - yet management went ahead - stuck with his little first round picks like he does every year BENSON *cough *cough...Grossman *cough *cough...and thats all these punks do, is cough up the freaking ball...like i said before...GET A RUNN
Last edited by TheRealWildCats on January 4th at 1:40 PM.
Cats - Spurs fans do seem to have gotten a bit defensive about people being tired of their team lately. Just look at Spurcse above.
I would like to see someone like Cuban get the Cubs, since he's committed to winning, but I wouldn't want to see them outspend the Yankees. Money doesn't buy championships, as the Yankees themselves have proven. I'd like to see the Cubs become a more forward-thinking organization, and learn how to spend their money wisely. The Red Sox are the best of both worlds and they won the World Series. As much as I despise them, I have to admit that they made the right moves to get to where they are.
I'm a fan of all Chicago sports teams (including both the Cubs and White Sox). When one of my teams isn't playing I'm a big proponent of rooting for the underdog. I'm currently an inactive NBA fan and will remain so until David Stern is out as commissioner. I spend more time thinking about sports than I probably should, so I decided I needed a blog where I could share those thoughts with the world.