2/26/2007

let's talk about local boys

Here’s one of the big problems in sports: do you want to like your team, or do you want them to win?

Of course the answer is that you want both of those things. But sometimes it seems impossible for teams to have it all.

Take the Blazers—after the disastrous Jailblazers era, the team has taken to acquiring “character players.” Nice guys, preferably with local connections. Brandon Roy is from Washington. Ime Udoka grew up in Portland. They recently traded for Fred Jones, who went to school here in Eugene. [edit: my sources note that Dan Dickau and Martell Webster are from the northwest as well].

Just because these players are local doesn’t mean they aren’t effective. Udoka has been one of the more consistent players for the Blazers this season. And he can play defense! I hear Fred Jones can also play defense, and let me tell you, that’s something I’d love to see more of on this team. And Brandon Roy is a playmaker. He may be a rookie, but I think he can help lead this team.

But the question remains: could the Blazers be more effective if they weren’t so concerned about character? The Pistons, who have been extremely successful the last couple years, have been an example of a team full of jerks that does well for itself.

***

I feel very strongly that storylines are important to sports. And that means you need two things—you need characters and you need conflict. That’s why I can’t always take stat guys completely seriously when they breakdown and analyze the numbers. We have a completely different point of view, a completely different way of looking at the games in front of us.

However, just because you need characters doesn’t mean they need to be good. Antiheros can have great stories. But the stories I like the best are the classics: The underdog beats huge odds. The good guys win. The person no one expected to succeed becomes a hero. How else could I cheer for teams from the northwest unless I loved watching the underappreciated struggle for respect?

Getting character guys definitely helps draw my attention. And I do like watching local boys succeed. There was nothing sweeter than watching the OSU Beavers baseball team become national champions, partly because nearly all the players were Oregonians. They represented an entire state. And that makes the story better, stronger, and more satisfying.

If you ask me, the Blazers can keep adding local boys. I just hope that they can be characters in a triumphant script, rather than a bittersweet tragedy.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Luckily there are still fans who respond to drama, conflict character and the story line of a good game. Those of us with English degrees, amongst others, are still more interested in the drama than the outcome.
Unfortunately we also have the fans who don't care who's on the team or how they perform, as long as they win. These are the guys (yes, virtually all guys) who assault other coaches at youth soccer and hockey games, chase Little League umpires to their cars, pour beer and abuse all over the parents of opposing players at college football games (can you spell Autzen Stadium?), overlook manslaughter conviction of a promising recruit (again with the University of Nike), or shoot the goalie should the national team lose an important match.
So where does this breed of fan come from? They're certainly not English majors. Probably descended from the first Neanderthal who snuck next door to drag off somebodies daughter by the hair. They eventually evolved, wiping out the neighboring tribea and razing entire villages. Eventually sports were invented to sublimate these anti-social urges. Kicking an old skull around the pitch, horse-back tug-of-war with a live (at least initially)goat,and such were found to be healthy outlets for excess agression.
However, once sports became a spectator event rather than a participatory past-time, these agressive tendencies had no healthy outlet. Those who couldn't make the team sought to claim a little piece of glory through rabid fandom.
So where am I going with this? I forget. Anyway, I'm happy to see that someone will be writing about the drama of sports, not just
won-loss records.