Celebrating the unlikely champs
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The past has provided some remarkable World Series. Just two years ago, the Houston Astros gave their city a much-needed lift by winning a championship shortly after the devastation of Hurricane Harvey. And before that long-suffering Boston Red Sox and Chicago Cubs fans were finally rewarded when their teams won titles after waits of 86 and 108 years, respectively.
But this year鈥檚 win by the Washington Nationals will surely go down as one of the most satisfying for its loyal fans, as well as among the strangest in the history of baseball.
Until now, Washington took a back seat to no one when it came to baseball futility. In 1924, a team known as the Washington Senators won the World Series. But then came decade after decade of persistent losing. The 1950s Broadway show 鈥淒amn Yankees鈥 portrayed a frustrated Senators fan who sold his soul to the devil in exchange for becoming a baseball superstar and guaranteeing a Washington championship.聽
But the real Senators kept losing: 鈥淲ashington:聽First in war,聽first in peace, and聽last in the American League.鈥 This twisting of a saying honoring the nation鈥檚 first president became a cruel joke.
In 1961, the Senators left town to become the Minnesota Twins. A new Senators team was created 鈥 and itself moved away in 1972 to become the Texas Rangers. In 2005, the Montreal Expos moved south and became聽the Washington Nationals.
Early on, that team wandered through its own baseball wilderness. But aided by the third-highest payroll in baseball (behind the Cubs and New York Yankees), ,聽the Nats, as their fans call them, slowly assembled the talent needed to compete.
In an oddity that forever will be associated with the 2019 World Series, the visiting team won all seven games. Not only had that never happened in baseball; it had never happened in the championship rounds of professional basketball or hockey, either.聽
The Astros had won 107 games, the most in baseball. The Nats had won but 93, barely squeaking into the playoffs as a wild-card team,聽though they were among the hottest teams in the second half of the season.聽
As does every winning team, the Nats bonded with their fans, developing their own lovable traditions. Nationals Park swayed to the children鈥檚 tune 鈥淏aby Shark,鈥 the team鈥檚 unofficial anthem.
Perhaps most important for Americans both inside and outside the Beltway, the Nats provided a welcome diversion from the capital鈥檚 roughest sport: politics.
Game after game, they were able to keep surprising 鈥 and intriguing 鈥 us. How often could they stand on the brink of defeat without falling?聽
Their unexpected success can serve as a needed reminder that anything, even political comity, is possible.