Baseball, Fatherhood and Multitasking

Kauffman Stadium

Believe it or not, I have been a Boston Red Sox fan for over a decade now. I found this team in the way I have found other teams I root for in my history. To spite my father. You would think after he moved several states away over a decade ago and the time in between would have helped to ease my interest in a team I picked, not because of proximity to where I grew up or any sort of other real connection, but just because I liked to razz my old man, who as you can guess, is a New York Yankee fan.

I live in Kansas City, and before George Brett retired in 1993, this was home to the spunky, competitive Royals. However, in the last 20 years or so, the life has nearly been drained from Kauffman Stadium. Milquetoast ownership, bad management from the front office to the bench (but one of the best prospect and player development machines in the majors), the Royals have set new standards in the word low, which statistically could occupy a separate post all together.

Give Royals fans credit. Kauffman Stadium is full on Opening Day, full for every game when the cross-state rival St. Louis Cardinals come to town, nearly full when the Twins come and when they are competitive (mostly because of Minnesota transplants and because it’s just a six hour drive down I-35 to KC) and sparsely populated the rest of the time. We’ll be hosting the 2012 All-Star game as well. It’s a good time to be a Kansas City baseball fan in general, just for that fact alone.

So let this be said. If the Royals could, in a bad year, be flirting with staying above .500 from wire-to-wire and, in a good year, compete for the division and make the playoffs two out of every five or six years, this would become the baseball town it is meant to be. Sorry Chiefs fans, if the Royals didn’t suck the NFL would be riding shotgun in Kansas City.

This is all a lot of blah, blah, blah to get to my question and/or my point.

My son and probable future Royals fan.

Here is my question, and my dilemma. A question to myself, and to you, the reader. What am I to do as a new father? This past November my wife and I welcomed this guy into the world. Little David Louis stands the possibility to grow up in a town where the baseball team is no longer the pride of its citizens. Which is a shame. Even those in my generation barely remember the glory days. They remember letting guys like Carlos Beltran, Jermaine Dye and Johnny Damon go to places like Houston (then New York) and Oakland (then Boston) more than Bret Saberhagen, Frank White and Hal McRae.

Here is another fact of life I didn’t expect to happen since my son was born. I have become increasingly irritated and impatient with Dayton Moore’s inability to find at least serviceable starting pitching and reluctance to find someone who can bring in some damn runs. Two things that never used to enter the head space of yours truly.

I can tell you what I won’t do. Raise him as a Red Sox fan. I am looking forward to taking him to ‘The K’ and talking to him about players I never cheered for, but know plenty about. So by rule, I believe I should become a Royals fan. Don’t get me wrong, I’ll still keep my subscription to MLB.TV in order to watch Sox games and even keep subscriptions to other Red Sox publications I’ve had for quite some time. However, I believe if you live in a town with a team in the majors, you are mandated to bond over that team with your son. I’m not from one of those cities, so this shift seems logical to me.

I’m not going to be the dad who brings his kid to a Royals game with the Indians in town and wear a Boston hat to the game while the Sox are in Tampa. That’s a douche move. You know that rulebook that is full of unwritten rules? Well, it doesn’t exist. But if it did, it would fall somewhere between not allowing your son to play in the mud and making him wear a helmet on his bike past the age of seven. Ok, I may not win that last one as long as my wife is breathing.

As a baseball fan in general, I dig into the history, the numbers and study every game box score like I’m searching for the cure for cancer. In mid-July you can find me eating breakfast at our dining room table and reading about Dustin Pedroia going 1-for-4 against a pitcher he normally bats .302 against and getting upset at it like my life actually depends on it.

That said, it would seem disingenuous to pretend to be a Royals fan in front of my son, but not do anything beyond that. When my kid asks me why we traded his favorite player for prospects and Angel Berrora, I want to give him an honest answer.

What am I to do? Drop the Sox as my team and take up the painstaking task of becoming (gulp) a full-time Royals fan? I’ve thought about this for several weeks. And today I believe I came to the only logical and most diplomatic conclusion. I’ll be a fan of both teams.

Now I know what you are thinking. “What will you be teaching your son about loyalty to one team if you have two ‘favorite’ teams? This is a cop out, sir.” It’s a fair question and accusation. And nothing in life is easy. When Boston comes to town, what do you do? Do you look your four year old in the eye and say “I can’t cheer for your team with you today, because your old man’s team is in town.” No. I’ll even go so far as to don some sort of Royals garb if we make our way to the ballpark when the Sox are in town. Painful as it may be. This is parenthood, no?

Sports loyalties can sometimes know no bounds. But not this time. While I may still be up past everyone and their bedtimes watching a West coast road swing against Seattle with a Pedro Martinez jersey on, I won’t cheer against my son’s team. At least not to his face.

But who knows, he may grow up to be a Milwaukee Brewers fan and all of this will be moot. In which case I’ll have no problem rubbing it in his face if the Sox ever sweep them in an interleague series.

An Exchange of Sorts

Papelbon costs the Sox their season.

Papelbon costs the Sox their season.

I don’t remember this happening, but sometimes I do like to bargain with myself.  “If Nebraska can beat Missouri in Columbia, I won’t mind if Boston loses in the playoffs.”  Every sports fan makes weird bets or deals with themselves, or maybe it’s just me.  No middle ground on this one folks.  The two years Boston won the World Series?  The Huskers go 5-7 and have some of the worst seasons in the 70 some odd years.  This is no mere coincidence folks.  There is something cosmic afoot here, and I want to know what is going on.

It’s been happening on the flip side too.  The year Nebraska won the Big 12 North, Boston missed the playoffs completely.  Flying in the face of this nonsense is the fact that the 49ers have sucked equally well in this time period.  At least until they ran into the offensive juggernaut that is the Atlanta Falcons.

I know, this is payback for growing up and watching my two football teams dominate in my memory.  I remember starting to watch football from when I was about seven or eight, and up until I was 19 for the Niners and about 21 for the Huskers, both teams dominated and annoyed everyone that wasn’t a fan.  1994 will never happen again, I know this, but you never can stop hoping for a Super Bowl and a National Championship in the same year, right?

I wanted to believe in the way Boston was doing things, and part of me still does.  High priced free agents coupled with a great internal system that would dominate the baseball landscape for years to come.  Something Theo and company did not anticipate is in the offseason the New York Yankees would step up their payroll into the stratosphere.  I don’t play the David vs. Goliath card when it comes to these two teams because it is absurd.  But this season, it is different.  The difference between the Yankees’ $208,097,414 payroll and Boston’s $122,435,399 team salary is the difference (approximately $85,000,000) between the Soxs’ number and the Florida Marlins’ payroll of 35,774,000.  The Marlins have the 31st highest (or second lowest) payroll in all of baseball.  There is some perspective most people probably haven’t added up yet.  Baseball is a numbers game when you translate money into big time ball players, and the Yankees are king of the hill.

It’s a big market bonanza this year.  Only two teams outside the top 15 in terms of payroll (Minnesota and Colorado) made it into the postseason this year.  So with Boston out, the excitement of watching an underdog pull of an upset is not happening.  Warm up the stove, because I’m about to check out already.

Playoff Bonanza!

Hoss is mighty pleased to see the playoffs.

Hoss is mighty pleased to see the playoffs.

The Major League Baseball playoffs begin today with a one-off in the Twin Cities between the Minnesota Twins and Detroit Tigers.  Both will play for the right to face off against the mighty Yankees in the American League Divisional Series starting later this week.  Boston will be squaring off against the perennial Sox post season punching bag Anaheim Angles.  As per usual, a playoff match up heavily favors Boston with power pitching and a bullpen, that while suspect during the stretch of the regular season, should be tuned up and ready to roll against the Halos.

Everyone’s eyes are on the Bronx Bombers as it seems like it is their World Series crown to lose.  Early in the year I might have said the Sox will outclass the Yanks for the duration, however we all know that pre-2004, this was never the case.  New York always had a habit of screwing around in April and May and making a case in the weeks leading up to the All-Star break.  Much like that chick in high school you dated too long, they are the ultimate tease.

Giving Them Props

Here is where we talk about the rarely mentioned National League, at least in this here blog.  But give the senior league credit, the match ups within look great, and the story lines are superb.  Scrappy Colorado, fresh off picking Jason Giambi off the scrap heap, will stare down the world champion Philadelphia Phillies.  Joe Torre and a possibly juiced Manny Ramirez will play the new Atlanta Braves, the St. Louis Cardinals.  The red birds just seem built and poised to make a Braves like run in their division for the next several years.

The Picks are IN

Divisional Series

Sox over Angles / Yankees over Twins

Phillies over Rockies / Cardinals over Dodgers

League Championship

Yankees over Sox (bleh)

Cardinals over Phillies

World Series

Yankees over Phillies

There you have it, I’m going to officially go and be depressed until February now.

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