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What other teams can learn from the Red Sox

No curse was broken. No drought was extinguished. It finished all too predictably, with Boston marching seemingly unstoppably toward victory in a Game 5 that was a bit boring, at least in comparison to what came before. This was not the record-breaking, 18-inning monster of Game 3 or the come-from-behind gem for the ages of Game 4. It was just a dominant team doing what it does. If you’re not a Red Sox fan and the final game of the series seemed more like a period than an exclamation point, it’s worth taking a moment to appreciate Boston's accomplishment for what it was: a truly remarkable achievement by a truly remarkable team. The modern MLB postseason often feels more like a lottery than anything else — one where the reward for nine of the 10 teams that enter it every year is dejection, one where regular-season records seem to matter little. Not so this year. Only one team in the storied halls of MLB history won more games en route to a title, the 1998 Yankees, who won 114 in the regular season and 11 in


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