Sports is a fantasy world, a release for so many Americans from the rigors of day-to-day modern society.
Let's face it. Over the last few months, sports has brought a lot of fantasy-seekers back to reality. And the delay of Opening Day in baseball doesn't promise much solace for some soul-searching spectators.
It all started with the October Classic, which became in a few brief moments the October Nightmare. Candlestick Park shook, major league baseball shuddered and the World Series was split by tragedy. Debates raged about whether or not the Series should be finished, but for all intents and purposes--both competitively and in terms of fan interest--it was over the moment our television screens went blank.
The Oakland A's swept the Series, but no one cared. No one will remember. They will remember Jose Canseco helping a frightened child out of the stands.
Then Billy Martin died in a drunk-driving accident in upstate New York.
The New York Yankees' All-Star second baseman had become a folk hero as a manager for New York and Texas and New York and Oakland and New York and New York. Somehow, people in New York City always got a chuckle out of Martin's antics.
Sure, he rarely managed to stay out of trouble for long, especially with long-time employer and nemesis George Steinbrenner, but he was adored by the masses. He grabbed our attention, took us away from reality.
He yelled and screamed. We yelled and screamed back.
Today, he is silent. And so are we.
For Boston fans, the winter has been relentless. Tony Conigliaro, the "embodiment" of the Red Sox organization, died last month.
He was a can't-miss player, a superstar-to-be, and then his career was tragically cut short by a beanball. He struggled to make it back. He was everyone's hero.
And even his struggle has ended.
Eternal Hope in Spring
Sports fans looked for consolation somewhere. At least spring training was right around the corner and right behind it, March Madness. Hope remained.
But major league baseball, the most popular spectator sport in the country, double-crossed us. The owners locked, the players walked and, in terms of Opening Day, everyone balked.
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