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
Get Articles and ICO whitepapers written by Williams Alfred Onen
Get Articles and ICO whitepapers written by Williams Alfred Onen
Comments
Post a Comment