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Couch Commentary: Are The Chargers Jinxed? by Ryan Thies | General | 01.19.10 | | Text Size: +
If the Lakers decide they want to save money by not bringing Phil Jackson back, the LA-area sports media needs to pass the hat to try and keep him, because there is nobody better at giving quotes. The most recent example was his Zen-ness’s observation that the Clippers’ weren’t cursed, they just had bad karma. Lord Zenenstein is absolutely right—there are three kinds of losing franchises: the losers (think: the Arizona Cardinals, the Bengals) basically teams that are just not very good for no reason other than that they suck; then there are the karmically-challenged (the Clippers, the LA Kings--anyone that watched the 30 for 30 on Gretzky knows that the Kings aren’t cursed by that trade but it certainly wasn’t good karma to screw the entire country of Canada); and lastly there are teams that are cursed. The last one is by far the smallest; they just don’t make
good curses anymore. Sports used
to do it right. You shaft a guy,
he spits twice and spins in a circle, and suddenly your team can’t win a Championship;
if you trade Ruth, your archrival gets to bitchslap you for nearly ninety years.
Like the mob breaking your legs,
it’s dirty but fair. But now that
the Red Sox have won theirs, there’s one fewer curse in the world. To be cursed your fans need to be miserable, they need to
feel dread every time the big game approaches, they need to know (just know!) that the team is going to hurt them and they’re
going to do it because there are mystical forces colluding against them.
Furthermore there needs to be one event that follows a long run of success, and
immediately after that the success leaves…never to return again. You’ll hear plenty of teams claim they
are in this elite group- the “Vikings curse”, the “Browns curse”, etc.--but
while it certainly must suck to cheer for those teams, surprisingly, the most
cursed team in the NFL is the Chargers.
Maybe it was the AFL/NFL merger in 1970 (only 12 Super Bowls
have been won by former AFL teams.)
Maybe it was Conrad Hilton selling the team in ‘66 (the new owners
Eugene Klein and Sam Schulman seemed like pretty decent guys but maybe they ran
over a witch or slept with a gypsy’s daughter or something to bring this
about. Klein, a long-time
democrat, did publically support Nixon in ’72 but that wouldn’t lead to being
cursed…um…right?) Maybe their
Stadium, built in ’67, was designed by a guy that went to King Tut’s tomb or
was a 27-year-old Rock Star or was elected President in a year that ends in
zero. Or more likely, it was
changing their uniforms from the Powder Blue--surely the Forces That Be are
totally rocking the light blue Alworth jersey like Snoop in the “Beautiful”
video, and clearly switching to the dark blue in ’74 pissed them off. Before the 2009 season (when the AFL 50th
anniversary meant they wore the light blues often) the Chargers had 11 wins in
their last 11 games while wearing the powder blues--including the fluky win
over the Colts in the ’08 postseason.
Obviously no curse known to man or beast can override the power of a
truly sweet uniform. But whatever
caused the curse, the success the Chargers had in the first half of the 60s
(winning the AFC West 5 of the first 6 years and won the AFL Championship in
’63) immediately disappeared in the 2nd half of the decade. But again simply losing isn’t the same as being cursed. The Chargers being the most dominant
team of the early 60s followed by forty years without a Championship is
heartbreaking but not paranoid-schizophrenia inducing. Instead, like Bucky F’n Dent and Aaron
F’n Boone proved to Red Sox fans, Chargers fans know what cursed losing looks
like. It’s losing to your
archrivals in ways that defy human explanation. It’s 1978. The
Raiders QB--down by 6--fumbled the ball on the 12, and then kicked it forward,
only to have the running back also knock it forward, only to have the tight end
also knock it forward, into the end zone, before he fell on it with no time
left (the rule change that an offensive player can’t advance a fumble was
created that offseason.) It’s the ’81 playoffs in which they had to beat the Dolphins
in 85 degree heat only to play the Bengals the next week in a wind-chilled
minus 59 degrees. Only voodoo can
explain having back-to-back playoff games 144 degrees different. Cursed losing is seeing your former
players leave to the rival Niners so that they can win a Championship. Cursed losing is decades of crappy
teams. Cursed losing is finally
getting it together in ’94, making it all the way to the Super Bowl, only to
see that same Niners team--the one that your players go to when they want to
finally win one--and have that team absolutely demolish you. There is little agony that can compare
to choke jobs on the biggest stage.
There is little that can compare to your hopes and dreams going unused,
like a dictionary in the Jersey Shore. There is little to explain Ryan Leaf other than the
work of very powerful forces that were very angry at San Diego. The new millennium was not enough to change the story. Our ex-players still broke up with us
in order to go find what they were looking for somewhere else, this time in New
England. Our owner still supported
Republicans with eavesdropping issues.
Our front office still fought with our coaches so that we couldn’t keep
both. The only thing different
about the new incarnations of the curse was that like Samuel L. Jackson movies they
seemed to be coming out constantly and all of them found new ways to suck. There was the 2004 postseason loss to the Jets. It was the kind of loss that only
cursed people know. The come-from-behind,
only to blow the lead, only to get a chance to comeback (and raise everyone’s
hopes), only to miss a field goal with the game on the line. At the time we thought our success made
Eli (and puppetmaster Archie) Manning look stupid. “If you think we can’t win, well shove these 12 wins up
your…” but little did we know that Archie, like crucifixes and garlic, was just
trying to stave off what was affecting the Chargers. Then there was the 2006 postseason loss to the
Patriots. 14 wins, LT looking like
a God, Rivers looking like he figured It
out. But the fumbles, and mistakes, and the missed FGs,
and the whatever-it-was-that-was-preventing-us-from-winning that day. At the time we thought it was Marty
Schottenheimer. We thought the
14-2 followed by a first-game exit was his fault. “If you can’t win in the playoffs, we don’t want you…” but
little did we know that Marty might be an effect more than a cause. Then there was this past weekend. The story is still fresh enough: Rivers collapsing, Kaeding--the
most accurate kicker in NFL history--missing 3 FGs when just one would have
sent it to OT, Revis’ interception--the one that bounced off VJ twice before
falling into Revis’ hands--all of them are the kinds of things that happens
when you’re cursed. But this time we can’t blame anyone corporeal. We can’t blame bad luck, we can’t blame
bad coaching, we can’t blame ourselves.
We simply need to understand that we are trifling with forces that we
don’t understand. We are
cursed. So just how did the Red Sox beat Ruth’s curse? Curt Schilling performed a heroic act (the bloody sock game) while invoking the only guy tougher than the Bambino, Lou Gerhig (with Schilling’s “K-ALS” note on his shoe.) We’ll have to put our heads together and figure out what the equivalent of that would be in the NFL; or maybe we can invoke the Hilton legacy by bringing Paris to a game, or maybe we can just move stadiums, or maybe, just maybe, we should just get Phil Jackson to coach the team. Written by Ryan ThiesRyan "Leaky Pipes" Thies got his nickname when he missed a guest spot on SportsNight due to a plumbing problem at his house (there really isn't anything more to the nickname, sorry to disappoint you.) For the record, if Ryan were to introduce himself on MNF, he would be torn between introducing himself as from St John Bosco (an Honorary LB school), LBCC, or CSULB. Read More Articles by Ryan Thies... Comments
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God Hates San Diego Sport Great article (although i'm an independent voter and don't care much about the far right vs far left ideal) I'm surprised that San Diegans aren't talking about a jinx on their team. But one thing to know. It's not just the Chargers. All of San Diego's teams are jinxed. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/San_Diego_sports_curse
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