Sweet Victory to the DESERVING
It was a fabulous and noisy night at the stadium. Ervin Santana entered the national baseball stage and deserves every accolade he can be accorded. I had never personally attended a game where the Angels stood to be eliminated (unless you count early September games in miserable seasons long gone).
Beyond the Santana storyline there stands a transformative moment in this game, one which should put all of baseball on notice that a long-accepted stereotype is not only wrong, it is demonstrably wrong.
The stereotype in question is the assumption that California baseball crowds are inadequate fans, do not measure up to East Coast boisterous, knowledgeable fans who are in the game and are loyal to fault. In the 2nd inning of tonight's game, that inaccurate stereotype was delivered to the myth branch of baseball lore. Adam Kennedy hit a warning track fly ball into the gap. It was playable and should have been caught, but outfielders Sheffield and Crosby were deafened by the roar of the Southern California stadium crowd.
They collided.
Two runs scored to take the lead. The Yankees lost in part due to the intense commitment and involvement of the Southern California fans.
While Angel fans were loud and wild during the 2002 playoffs, the media's fixation on the Rally Monkey cast a goofy pall on the Red October Nation. But tonight, our loud involvement affected the outcome of the game - to our team's advantage. WE helped send the Yankees home. Frame your 10/10/05 ticket stub - it is proof you contributed to one of the great on-field moments in franchise history.
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Amen
Of course, you won't hear about that on Fox or ESPN.
oh no
Tim McMoron makes logical comment?
Buck and his trusty sidekick...
Case in point. Matsui going into the stands to catch the foul ball. What do the fans in Anaheim do? They back away and let him catch it. I turned to my wife and said, "that's why we get a bad name across the country...that ball is fair game and the fans should have knocked it out of his golve or interfered with it." Not that it was, but it could have been a turning point.
by cblesz @ Halos Heaven on Oct 11, 2005 8:37 AM PDT reply actions
long time reader first time poster
also, the collision between crosby and sheffield was one of the funniest thing i saw in awhile. we were laughing so hard.
by sp @ Halos Heaven on Oct 11, 2005 10:26 AM PDT up reply actions
Jeez
Tough shit, losers.
Their world just came crashing down
by Sean @ Halos Heaven on Oct 11, 2005 9:10 AM PDT up reply actions
what?
by cblesz @ Halos Heaven on Oct 11, 2005 9:10 AM PDT reply actions
Just looking around
collision...
by cblesz @ Halos Heaven on Oct 11, 2005 10:32 AM PDT reply actions
Last Monday...
And about last nights game. There were about a half a dozen or so Skankee fans scattered around Angel Stadium. So whenever the Skankees weren't screwing up the game the cameras would get some goon standing up in some 20 year old t-shirt in a close up. Like "Check out the faithful, we ain't skaied too coome in-to yo house."
All in All it was a great game. Fans at the game were great (Hats Off to ya). Me and my son standing and yelling at home in Hawaii. Big Time.
LAAAAAAAAAAAoooooooooooooAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
Hey Rev. you said you talked to Bobby last night. What did you get another special invite to some post game activities?
GO HALO's BEAT THE UGLY
bitching about umps
dear yankee fan,
you did not lose games because of umpire calls. hell, most of them went in your favor. oh, and they were good calls, for the most part.
instead of complaining about why cano was called out for running out of the basepath, maybe you should focus on getting some starting pitching. or getting some relief pitching. or convincing your marquee players to contribute in a meaningful way when it counts.
then again, maybe you just got beat fair and square.
I am not an A's Nation guy...look at my name
by cblesz @ Halos Heaven on Oct 11, 2005 12:00 PM PDT reply actions
you are right
what the hell was that guy ducking for? if he would've tried to catch the ball like any other fan, matsui would've never had a chance at it.
luckily, it didn't end up having big ramifications.

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