The Joy of Losing

· Friday, April 23, 2010

WASHINGTON -- Among my various idiosyncrasies, such as (twice) driving from Washington to New York to watch a world championship chess match, the most baffling to my friends is my steadfast devotion to the Washington Nationals. When I wax lyrical about having discovered my own private paradise at Nationals Park, eyes begin to roll and it is patiently explained to me that my Nats have been not just bad, but prodigiously -- epically -- bad.

As if I don't know. They lost 102 games in 2008; 103 in 2009. That's no easy feat. Only three other teams in the last quarter-century have achieved back-to-back 100-loss seasons.

Now understand: This is not the charming, cuddly, amusing incompetence of, say, the '62 Mets, of whom their own manager, Casey Stengel, famously asked, "Can't anybody here play this game?" -- and whose stone-gloved first baseman, Marv Throneberry, was nicknamed Marvelous Marv, the irony intended as a sign of affection.

Nor am I talking about heroic, stoic, character-building losing. The Chicago Cubs fan knows that he's destined for a life of Sisyphean suffering and perpetual angst. These guys go 58 years without winning, then come within five outs of the National League pennant, only to have one of their own fans deflect a ball about to settle into a Cub outfielder's glove, killing the play and bringing on the unraveling.

The fan was driven into hiding and the fateful ball ritually exorcised, blown to smithereens on TV. Sorry, that's not my kind of losing. Been there. I'm a former Red Sox fan, now fully rehabilitated. No, I don't go to games to steel my spine, perfect my character, journey into the dark night of the soul. I get that in my day job watching the Obama administration in action.

I go for relief. For the fun, for the craft (beautifully elucidated in George Will's just-reissued classic, "Men at Work") and for the sweet, easy cheer at Nationals Park.

You get there and the twilight's gleaming, the popcorn's popping, the kids're romping and everyone's happy. The joy of losing consists in this: Where there are no expectations, there is no disappointment. In Tuesday night's game, our starting pitcher couldn't get out of the third inning. Gave up four straight hits, six earned runs, and as he came off the mound, actually got a few scattered rounds of applause.

Applause! In New York he'd have been booed mercilessly. In Philly, he'd have found his car on blocks and missing a headlight.

No one's happy to lose, and the fans cheer lustily when the Nats win. But as starters blow up and base runners get picked off, there is none of the agitation, the angry, screaming, beer-spilling, red-faced ranting you get at football or basketball games.

Baseball is a slow, boring, complex, cerebral game that doesn't lend itself to histrionics. You "take in" a baseball game, something odd to say about a football or basketball game, with the clock running and the bodies flying.

And for a losing baseball team, the calm is even more profound. I've never been to a park where the people are more relaxed, tolerant and appreciative of any small, even moral, victory. Sure, you root, root, root for the home team, but if they don't win "it's a shame" -- not a calamity. Can you imagine arm-linked fans swaying to such a sweetly corny song of early 20th-century innocence -- as long gone as the manual typewriter and the 20-game winner -- at the two-minute warning?

But now I fear for my bliss. Hope, of a sort, is on the way -- in the form of Stephen Strasburg, the greatest pitching prospect in living memory. His fastball clocks 103 mph and his slider, says Tom Boswell, breaks so sharply it looks like it hit a bird in midair. In spring training, center fielder Nyjer Morgan nicknamed him Jesus. Because of the kid's presence, persona, charisma? Nope. Because "that's what everybody says the first time they see Strasburg throw," explained Morgan. "Jeeee-sus."

But now I'm worried. Even before Strasburg has arrived from the minor leagues, the Nats are actually doing well. They're playing .500 ball for the first time in five years. They are hovering somewhere between competent mediocrity and respectability. When Jesus arrives -- my guess is late May -- they might actually be good.

They might soon be, gasp, a contender. In the race deep into September. Good enough to give you hope. And break your heart.

Where does one then go for respite?

(c) 2010, The Washington Post Writers Group


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Comments

CarryingColoradan

"Where does one then go for respite?"

Huh??? Back to "watching the Obama administration in action", natch. :^(

Posted April 23, 2010 at 12:37:24 PM


Kathy

Excellent story, Charles! You made me want to watch a baseball game, and I don't even like baseball.

Posted April 23, 2010 at 4:24:21 PM


Alex Torello

Kathy:

Baseball, like fine wine, opera and other human enterprises worth being involved with--is an acquired taste.

Posted April 23, 2010 at 6:10:23 PM


MichaelSSEC

Mr Krauthammer is, I suspect, being facetious when he says baseball is "boring." It's boring as hell -- to non-fans, to those who do not understand what is happening on the field. To those of us who have played, or who have watched tykes come up through tee-ball to Little League to Babe Ruth and varsity ball, baseball is high drama. It's better suspense than a Hitchcock classic.

But Mr Krauthammer describes himself as a "former Red Sox fan, fully rehabilitated." I respectfully submit there is no such animal. One is either a Red Sox fan for life, and adores the most storied team in professional sports, or one is committing baseball adultery with some floozy team that's now closer to home.

I get it. The Red Sox have won not just a World Series, but TWO of the things. They're no longer the Heartbreak Kids. They're chronic contenders, and as Mr Krauthammer points out, there's a certain element of fandom present in the stands of a team in contention for the pennant that is conspicuously absent from fans of teams like the Cubs and Natties. There's a degree of "something" that is definitely not fatalism. More like the sort of half-embarrassed, half-pleased affection a parent feels when the 7-year old is up on the school auditorium stage murdering a poor innocent violin. It's no longer music; it's been elevated to the status of a tradition, something generations of mildly tortured souls have patiently, even happily, borne.

As I've said before, who ever said Conservatives have no sense of humor? Mr Krauthammer is sensible enough for anybody.

Posted April 24, 2010 at 10:37:21 PM


Rob

My two brothers' in law and I were at a baseball game one time. We were discussing how William Shakespeare might write about the game of baseball as an entire subculture (mostly our team, the cubs). It was a great conversation (at the park). Apparently it was too much for the FANs around us. We received multiple death threats and thrown food and drink. An usher even came by and told us to stop the conversation because we were upsetting the people around us. I think the Cubs lost that day.

Posted April 26, 2010 at 4:16:13 AM


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