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Thanksgiving in October.


There were plenty of things to frighten a seven-year-old on the South Side of Chicago in 1983, but nothing struck fear into my young heart like the sight of a White Sox home run at Comiskey Park Coordinates:  .

The park's "exploding scoreboard"--a remnant of legendary Sox owner Bill Veeck William Louis Veeck, Jr. (IPA: [vɛk], rhymes with "wreck"; February 9 1914 – January 2 1986), also known as "Sport Shirt Bill , the P. T. Barnum of baseball--would whir whir  
v. whirred, whir·ring, whirs

v.intr.
To move so as to produce a vibrating or buzzing sound.

v.tr.
To cause to make a vibratory sound.

n.
1.
 and send up booming fireworks fireworks: see pyrotechnics.
fireworks

Explosives or combustibles used for display. Of ancient Chinese origin, fireworks evidently developed out of military rockets and explosive missiles and accompanied the spread of military explosives westward to
 every time a Sox batter hit a home run. It scared the hell out of me. And in '83, when the Sox won the American League American League (AL)

One of the two associations of professional baseball teams in the U.S. and Canada designated as major leagues; the other is the National League (NL).
 Western Division, they hit lots of homers.

My dad had season tickets. As a self-employed executive head-hunter, he took full advantage of Reagan-era tax policy, writing off the seats as a "business" expense. That meant bringing his business partner and me to the games. Before long, whenever a Sox player hit one out of the park, I was diving into my dad's lap, anticipating the bombardment. "You don't have to hide," he'd say, while his partner routinely quipped, "Helluva hell·uv·a  
adj. Slang
Used as an intensive: He's a helluva great guy.



[Alteration of hell of a.]
 Sox fan." And though he didn't realize it then, my dad's partner was right: those terrifying ter·ri·fy  
tr.v. ter·ri·fied, ter·ri·fy·ing, ter·ri·fies
1. To fill with terror; make deeply afraid. See Synonyms at frighten.

2. To menace or threaten; intimidate.
 hours at Comiskey Park were turning me into a diehard White Sox fan.

And as all Sox fans know, fear of success is endemic to the South Side faithful. You get a taste of victory, and you have to look away, because you know what's coming. Collapse.

The sports media like to make hay out of team "curses": the Boston Red Sox The Boston Red Sox are a professional baseball team based in Boston, Massachusetts. The Red Sox are a member and currently champions of the Eastern Division of Major League Baseball’s American League. From to the present, the Red Sox have played in Fenway Park.  got over their "Bambino" problem last year. The Chicago Cubs, on the North Side of the city, continue to labor under their own blight--they haven't brought home a championship since 1908. And the Pale Hose? Shoeless Joe Jackson
    Joseph Jefferson Jackson (July 16, 1888 – December 5, 1951), nicknamed "Shoeless Joe", was an American baseball player who played Major League Baseball in the early part of the 20th century.
     haunted our clubhouse until last month; the infamous "Black Sox" allegedly threw the 1919 World Series for the benefit of bookies. According to today's media, the Sox have been plagued by the curse of Shoeless Joe ever since.

    Real Sox fans never bought it. Sure, they witnessed eighty-eight years of disappointing, if intermittently well-played, baseball. But over the decades, they learned that the failures were entirely human--nothing curse-like or supernatural about them. Sox fans grew accustomed to the botched botch  
    tr.v. botched, botch·ing, botch·es
    1. To ruin through clumsiness.

    2. To make or perform clumsily; bungle.

    3. To repair or mend clumsily.

    n.
    1.
     plays, the stranded base runners, the missed pitches. As a consequence, the deadliest impulse of a Pale Hose fan was hope: Banking on South Side success was the surest way to guarantee failure.

    Until now.

    On Wednesday night, October 26, that eighty-eight-year drought ended. The Sox routed the Houston Astros in four games, finally winning their first World Series since 1917. For some, it was a quasi-religious event. Having thrown off the yoke of the vastly more popular Cubs on the North Side, Sox fans finally found redemption.

    Or not. Comparing popular sport to organized religion is a pastime of some sports writers and theologians. Look at the similarities: the masses gather at the appointed time to follow a prescribed ritual. They put their faith in larger-than-life figures who carry out near mythical stories of triumph. The tradition, the emotion, the commitment, the sheer intensity of it all. How else to explain the hopeless devotion of Sox fans except by chalking it up to religion?

    I'm more inclined to credit tribalism. As deep and as old as organized religion, clannish clan·nish  
    adj.
    1. Of, relating to, or characteristic of a clan.

    2. Inclined to cling together as a group and exclude outsiders.



    clan
     impulses form the foundations of fandom. Why do I--born and raised in Cubs territory--root for the White Sox? My parents were South Siders, and no baseball season passed without my being inculcated with renewed doses of Sox pride. In the end, blood wins. I am a Sox fan, just as my father was a Sox fan, and his father before him. We were taught from birth to cheer for the Sox, and the desire for their victories, for the demolishment of their opposition, bound us to the team and to Pale Hose fans across the country.

    Sports writers prattle on about the redemption of the White Sox, alluding to notions of fate, even claiming that the dedication of long-suffering fans provides evidence of some sort of elusive civil religion. That's a bit much. The reality is far less complicated. It's a matter of battling the antipathy of the other half of Chicago, of defying the expectations of every expert and what often seemed like the dictates of basic reason. White Sox good. Opponents bad. Yes, loyalty has its value. But in sports, loyalty can easily warp into less-than-wholesome impulses. I've seen it in myself, in my cheers when the other team fails (a 4-0 sweep, even better!). After nearly nine decades of drought, after my gauntlet of exploding scoreboards, I deserve a little vindication, right? But if the sports writers are on to something, if the White Sox championship really is a sign of redemption, then why do I feel like I need to go to confession?

    Grant Gallicho is an associate editor of Commonweal com·mon·weal  
    n.
    1. The public good or welfare.

    2. Archaic A commonwealth or republic.

    Noun 1.
    .
    COPYRIGHT 2005 Commonweal Foundation
    No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
    Copyright 2005, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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    Article Details
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    Title Annotation:The Last Word; Chicago White Sox
    Author:Gallicho, Grant
    Publication:Commonweal
    Geographic Code:1U3IL
    Date:Nov 18, 2005
    Words:806
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