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Cubbies and Blackhawks and Bears, Oh My!

Courtney DrobickMay 17, 2009

Cubbies and Blackhawks and Bears, Oh My!

A Chicago girl’s view on being a sports fanatic.

My apologies for the predictable and oh so cliched title, but once I thought of it, my brain would not allow me to write anything else. So now you can all have that in your head, if you take nothing else away from this one.

It occurred to me recently that I've yet to write anything on my favorite thing second only to writing, which is sports. All the way home today, I was thinking about how I could incorporate it into a story. Lucky me, it took me an hour and a half to get home, despite working less than thirty minutes away. So I had plenty of quality thinking time.

Tony and I are sports fanatics. We're the people who you don't bother to call on Sunday during football season and who become apoplectic with anger and shock when our families try to plan things on these days.

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We're the ones who watch a ton of TV, but don't know anything about "Lost" or Dr. McDreamy or "24" because our TV might as well have two channels—whatever game is on or ESPN. (Although I do make allowances for American Idol, which I shamelessly love, and the History Channel/and or USA, which shows "CSI" or "Law and Order" on a 24 hour loop.)

Our entertainment revolves around sports—we don't go out much, and that's just fine, because we always have something to "do."

The Cubs are on, or the Hawks are playing, NASCAR nicely bridges the gap from football into baseball season, or it's March Madness, or almost March Madness so we have to brush up on colleges, or it's the Bowl season. In a pinch, golf or tennis will even work, but I can‘t quite get into that the way my husband can.

While the fact that not everyone revolves their schedule around major sporting events has crossed my radar screen in the past, i.e. "Oh, the Cubs are in the playoffs?" or "What time do the Bears play this weekend?“ (in week 13 when we still had a chance of going to the playoffs,). 

It really hit home the other day when I was talking to my co-workers about the Kentucky Derby and they had NO IDEA what I was talking about. None. Now, I realize horse racing isn't the most popular sport, and I freely admit that I don't follow it at all unless it's the Triple Crown or I happen to be at Arlington Park—but to have never heard of the Derby?

For most of my adult life, I've made sure that I have no plans that day so I can watch the coverage all day, picking out the best story (and there always is one) and on that day, at least, the race is "The most exciting two minutes in sports!" for me.

So someone not even knowing what is was was just so completely foreign to me; I couldn't comprehend. Of course, they also didn't know who Poison or Motley Crue was—so maybe it's their perception that's faulty? (Come ON. When I said "Home Sweet Home," Santa said, "Oh, yeah! Sweet Home Alabama! That's Motley Crue?"

I then suffered the indignity of explaining that that was Skynyrd, who she was also unaware of. ACK.)

Anyhoo, back to the lecture at hand. (You know who that is? NOT Eminem.) My point is, we're the crazy sports people. Amazing, as between the two of us we have the coordination of a spastic blind puppy, but it is what it is.

I've never been able to completely explain why I've come to near tears at missing a Bears game because I had a wedding shower or faultless irritation at not being able to watch the Cubs clinch a playoff spot.

I literally planned my wedding around sports schedules - no October because that would for sure be the year the Cubs finally made it to the World Series, no March because of college basketball, and no during football season completely—no way am I missing a game.

While I've become much more of a sports fan since Tony and I have been together -- it's always kind of been there.

I think it's the memories, and the possibilities of more to be made. I remember my first Cubs game -- my parents took me and Carly and my mom insisted we needed warmer clothes, which we, including my father, refused. Duh, Mom, it's like 75 degrees out.

And I remember crying because I was freezing and huddling in what probably amounted to a $40 sweatshirt because the sun went down and hey, you know what? It WAS cold. (This also sticks out in my mind because my mom's still mad about it. And because it would not be the last time I cried over a Cubs game.)

I remember going to the old Chicago Stadium with my dad, and banging on the walls and stomping on the floor during the National Anthem, not realizing at the time that "Remember the Roar" would be something I could say I was there for, or that I was making a memory that would still bring tears to my eyes twenty years later. I just knew, as a kid, that my chest and my heart and my head was so full of that amazing, screaming sound that I couldn't concentrate on anything else.

I remember my Junkyard Dogs poster, and I remember sitting on my living room floor on a Sunday as a kid, eating roast beef and Doritos, and watching Walter Payton. And I remember going to Platteville, and meeting Dan Hampton and some of my other idols. (You know what I DON'T remember? Where I put that freaking autograph book. Way to go, spaz.)

There's videos of me interviewing my sister, saying, "You don't want to be a cheerleader! I'm Walter Payton! Don't you want to be Jim McMahon!?" I remember crying at my Aunt Betty's house in '89 when the Cubs went to the playoffs, not only because they won but because I felt bad for the players on the team they beat. I still hate to see their faces, no matter how ecstatic I am when my team wins.

Tony has his memories, too. He remembers when he was about eight, when he rolled his dirty, beat up ball down the dugout to Tony LaRussa and LaRussa rolled a shiny, brand new autographed one back to him.

He remembers being thirteen and having just bought a Cincinatti hat. And then wearing that hat randomly in Florida, where he ran into the one and only Pete Rose, and then, shaking in his adolescent boots, asking Pete Rose to autograph it, which he did. He remembers betting his mom a quarter on the basketball games, and always losing. (To this day, I don't allow him to bet with his mother on important games.)

He remembers the Falcons edging the Vikes out of a playoff spot and his friend Nick (a Vikings fan) kicking him out of his house and going to games and baseball card shows with his dad. He still has all those baseball cards, and still finds joy at opening a brand new pack, wondering what will be inside.

And then there are the later years ... being at The Pub with Jill when the Cubs clinched and singing and swaying to "Sweet Home Chicago." Running into Jeni and Caitlyn's dorm when Sammy Sosa edged ahead of Mark McGwire in the great home run race.

Going to Bulls rallies with Amy, then later with Stacy, and marveling at all the people who came to see their idols. (Tony was there too, I just didn't know it at the time.)

Waiting in the rain with Amy and Melissa to see John Sally and Dennis Rodman get out of their limo at Crobar.

The Superbowl party some friends of ours had, and the joy at seeing the Pack blow it. (This was the same year these friends bought a keg and only about 15 people showed up, and we'd finished it by the end of the game. That may have excaberated the joy, but still.)

I remember bursting into tears when the Cubs didn't make it to the World Series in '03. (And being furious at, then furious for Steve Bartman -- I still think the paper that published his address should have been sued.)

I remember Tony throwing off his jersey in disgust when Jim Miller got hurt during the playoff game against Philly. I remember the "Miracle Season" when the Bears won back- -to-back games, coming back from two touchdowns down with less than three minutes. We watched nearly every game at Kelly and Pat's first apartment, where we'd stay up until four am and then get up to watch the Bears game.

We were at that Cleveland game, the second of the "miracle" wins, and I remember coming back to the car, yelling and screaming "Go Bears" where we ran into the people next to us who were from Cleveland whom we’d been tailgating and trash talking with earlier and had left the game early, assuming the Browns won, joyfully (and most likely drunkenly) telling them THEY LOST.

I remember nearly crying with joy when the Bears made the Superbowl and then losing my voice screaming when Devin Hester ran back the opening kick.

I remember watching my first NASCAR race (Daytona when Dale Earnhardt was killed, by the by,) and I remember driving back from Indianapolis, with rubber in my hair and dirt on my face, marveling at how fast they go.

And I remember being at the Bears/Packers game when it was 6 degrees outside, when everyone told us we were insane to go tailgate, and stomping my feet to keep feeling in them and keeping our beer in the car with the engine running because otherwise it would freeze.

I remember going to party in Wrigleyville in '03, and thinking there can't be any better place to be. I remember watching the Red Sox come back against the Yankees (much to Tony's fury,) and crying when they won it. (Cubs, you paying attention??? You can do this too, and make me possibly the happiest person EVER.)

And I remember opening day 07, hanging out with Carly and Bob at seven in the morning, looking in anticipation to the year ahead. (Cubs Fail!) I remember the fireworks when the Sox won the World Series (yes, I was happy. I'm a Chicago fan, and I make no apologies.) I loved seeing “Go Sox” and “Go Bears” written in the lights of the amazing Chicago skyscrapers. Hopefully it will read "Go Hawks" soon!

Or maybe it's the camaraderie. To me, nothing in the world beats the sound of the National Anthem at a sporting event. Looking around at thousands of people, singing or whistling or screaming, all in the name of America and their favorite team, will get me every time.

There is no better way to spend a Sunday morning than at a Bears game; rain, snow, or sunshine, the smell of barbeque and beer and singing of "Bear Down Chicago Bears" will always be one of my favorite places.

Everyone's happy and willing to share—even at a Bears/Packers game, tailgaters will share their beer or hamburgers or tents when it's raining.

I remember going to the Bears playoff game against the Panthers, with Marisa and Steve. We lost, but even to me, it didn't matter all that much, because the experience was so great.

I can remember looking at Tony while they were singing the National Anthem, while the fighter jets were flying over and I got that full feeling in my chest again, and thinking, "This might be the happiest I've ever been." When we saw the Yankees come to Chicago to play the White Sox on Sept. 18, 2001, I remember people telling us we shouldn't go, it was still too soon to know what was happening.

It was the first baseball game the Yankees had played since the attacks. But we went, and hearing that National Anthem, watching the New York Yankees and seeing all of the "I Love New York" and "We Love You" and "We Support You" signs, listening to the near silence during God Bless America in the seventh inning, is a memory I'm glad to have.

Later that weekend, we saw the first football game played since Sept. 11—the Bears and the Vikings. It poured. And when I say poured, I mean POURED. It was a miserable day for a game. But it didn't matter to the thousands of people that came, waving their flags.

I remember they gave out small American flags that day, and every single person there waved them frantically during our National Anthem, screaming and singing and crying in the rain, watching that big flag wave in the middle of the field, because that was something we could do, the only thing we knew to do.

We couldn't fix what was and still is happening. We couldn't bring back those people who were lost in the Twin Towers or the Pentagon or the flights. But we could, and did, support our team, and, at least in our minds, our country.

We could sing along proudly with the guy carrying a boombox, channeling 1985, who blasted Jimi Hendrix's version through the parking lot. For those hours, we could be happy. We could show our support and our sympathies and our love the only way we knew.

If you're not a sports fan, you might not really get this. But I hope you do. I hope it makes it make a little more sense when people like me and Tony say we're watching the hockey game when you ask if we have plans. To us, that IS a plan.

But if you are a sports fan, I hope this makes you think of your own memories. May we all have many more to come, and may my dream of the Cubs, Bears, Hawks, and Bulls all winning in the same year finally come true. That, to me, would be a year to remember.

Mitchell Headed to 1st Conference Finals 🔥

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