July 3, 2020: Long Gone Summer

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So I finally got around to watching the McGwire Sosa documentary on ESPN. I enjoyed it.

The title “Long Gone Summer” is appropriate, considering that is what this summer is beginning to feel like, for much different reasons of course. I enjoyed the prelude by the director of this 30 for 30. Back then when it was happening, all of us enjoyed it for what it was; there was no laser focus on steroid use and all that comes with it. Although it did get into the steroid conversation at the end, throughout the episode, watching the summer unfold, I tried to enjoy it like I did the first time around, and not worry about all that other crap. I think he did a good job with that. I also think that discussing steroids was a must, which was done at the end of the episode. I honestly didn’t recall that steroid use was not banned at the time; that’s what McGwire was saying right? So at the time, using them was not illegal in baseball. I wonder is that 100% accurate, or was this a loop hole in the rules? Either way, if this was not clearly banned, then how can those folks who did so be punished so severely?

Yeah, these guys will not see the Hall of Fame; that sucks. But, there was the ride… and the ride is the best part. 1998 was the pinnacle of that ride.

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Honestly, I have always disliked the Cardinals, but for that summer, for that home run heavyweight battle, that hate took a back seat. Seeing Sosa and McGwire embrace each other through this historic race showed us how we should be acting. Sure, did we want “our guy” to win it all; of course. Yet, it didn’t feel like an intense competition; it felt like one that was a lot of fun… at least for us it was. You saw the intense pressure on McGwire during the summer. It was interesting to see how Maris went through that back in the day. It would only be worse now. Seemingly Sosa was the more care free one throughout the year, loving the attention; that feels right.

At the end of the day, Sosa needs to be welcomed back to Wrigley. It would have been nice if he admitted it, but technically, besides the New York Times report, he never tested positive… Yeah, OK, well, we know, but… if it wasn’t illegal? Then if that wasn’t bad enough, there was the whole corked bat thing… But for me, walking out on his teammates the last day of that season was the last straw. Still, kind of like Derrick Rose, time heals all wounds, especially when your team has reached the pinnacle since then. I look forward to the day Sosa comes back to Wrigley, and although I’m not going to sugarcoat anything with my son about him, it doesn’t mean he still doesn’t deserve recognition for all he did for us.

The last thing I wanted to say was that I felt really sad watching it… I really miss going to Wrigley to watch the Cubs play. Seeing all those fans going nuts, even though some of the highlights of the fans were misplaced, meaning that picture of the fans on that day didn’t go with what happened in Wrigley on that day, made me miss being in Wrigley with my son. Like I said, long gone summer couldn’t be more true about baseball right about now…

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