The 2016 World Series is already perfect
The Cubs-Indians World Series could not come at a better time
In an election year that feels like a dark turning point in the history of the American nation, Major League Baseball is offering us a World Series that consoles us with the most wholesome pleasures conceivable. In sports terms, the Indians and the Cubs are ancient and venerable clans, with hard-bitten fans that are too used to losing year after year.
The Indians last won a World Series in 1948. The Cubs last won a World Series in 1908. Pick your favorite historical note. I've enjoyed relaying to people that the Indians last won a World Series before RCA introduced the 45 RPM record. And the Cubs last won a World Series before construction on the Titanic begun. (Four years before Downton Abbey's setting, if you prefer.) And yet we know that, barring a civilization-ending meteor strike, one of these teams is going to win the World Series this year.
To give you some idea of how seriously people are taking this, standing-room tickets in Wrigley Field are going for over $3,000 apiece. The Cubs present an extra bit of visual nostalgia — and it's not just the ivy. Unlike the roomy luxury seats of new stadiums, the crowd behind home plate in Wrigley is still crowded into each other tightly.
Subscribe to The Week
Escape your echo chamber. Get the facts behind the news, plus analysis from multiple perspectives.
Sign up for The Week's Free Newsletters
From our morning news briefing to a weekly Good News Newsletter, get the best of The Week delivered directly to your inbox.
From our morning news briefing to a weekly Good News Newsletter, get the best of The Week delivered directly to your inbox.
Despite their lovable losers reputation, the Cubs are coming in to the World Series as heavy favorites among bookies. The Cubs dominated the National League from the very start of the baseball season in April. They outgun the Indians in starting pitching. You may remember last year's National League Cy Young winner Jake Arrieta. Right behind him is Kyle Hendricks, who may win the Cy Young this year. And behind him is one of the best postseason pitchers of his generation, Jon Lester. Lester has pitched 21 innings this postseason and given up only two earned runs and two walks across them. He may pitch in three games out of seven if this Series goes the distance.
Dexter Fowler, who will become the first African American to appear in the World Series wearing a Cubs uniform when he comes to bat at Progressive Field for the first time, leads a lineup of batters that have recently shaken off a slump.
This is a team built to win this year and beyond. The turnaround has to be credited to Tom Ricketts, who purchased the team in 2009 and hired Theo Epstein as his president of baseball operations in 2011. If Epstein breaks the Cubs' curse just a little over a decade after doing the same for the Boston Red Sox, he becomes a Hall of Fame-worthy executive.
But don't plan for the parade yet.
The Indians are a team like few others. Like the Kansas City Royals in the last two years of the World Series, the Indians are a lineup without transcendent stars that somehow gets above-average contribution from the whole team. Well, maybe they have one transcendent star; shortstop Francisco Lindor has hit .323 for the Indians in the postseason while playing the kind of spectacular defense that has you texting friends or calling family members in from the kitchen to say, "You gotta see this." He is emblematic of a team that doesn't just win the game, but wins over new fans each time they play.
If the Indians have a shot it is because Terry Francona has pioneered masterly and innovative bullpen strategies to get through the playoffs. And he has the ultimate weapon to deploy in reliever Andrew Miller.
Miller is single-handedly inventing a new relief-pitcher role. In the past we had firemen who put out situations before they got out of hand. In the late 1980s, Tony LaRussa used Dennis Eckersley to pioneer the modern "closer" role, in which a great reliever was tasked with stealing the last three outs from a team that found itself behind in the final frame. In Miller we have a new "relief ace" who can be deployed at any time during the game. He may pitch two innings or more in a game, shutting down an opponent whose lineup is set to do damage in the middle innings. He is the breakout star of the 2016 postseason. During the regular season he put together a 1.45 ERA with a 0.68 WHIP.
This is the most fun matchup in the World Series in a long while and it could not come at a time when we needed it more. In the weeks before our quadrennial presidential election, the whole country fills with a kind of existential anxiety because we insist on treating that contest like it is a referendum on our own membership in our nation. My advice is to seek some relief in turning to a national pastime. In this one, America's nostalgists can find so much of the country's heritage to celebrate in the meeting of these venerable clubs and the new life that this Series brings to them. And our futurists can revel in a glimpse of America's future on the field, seeing in it something diverse and energetic.
Turn off cable news. Turn on the World Series.
Sign up for Today's Best Articles in your inbox
A free daily email with the biggest news stories of the day – and the best features from TheWeek.com
Michael Brendan Dougherty is senior correspondent at TheWeek.com. He is the founder and editor of The Slurve, a newsletter about baseball. His work has appeared in The New York Times Magazine, ESPN Magazine, Slate and The American Conservative.
-
Why are lawmakers ringing the alarms about New Jersey's mysterious drones?
TODAY'S BIG QUESTION Unexplained lights in the night sky have residents of the Garden State on edge, and elected officials demanding answers
By Rafi Schwartz, The Week US Published
-
10 upcoming albums to stream in the frosty winter
The Week Recommends Stay warm and curled up with a selection of new music from Snoop Dogg, Ringo Starr, Tate McRae and more
By Justin Klawans, The Week US Published
-
David Sacks: the conservative investor who will be Trump's crypto and AI czar
In the Spotlight Trump appoints another wealthy ally to oversee two growing — and controversial — industries
By David Faris Published
-
The hottest Super Bowl ad trend? Not running an ad.
The Explainer The big game will showcase a variety of savvy — or cynical? — pandemic PR strategies
By Jeva Lange Published
-
Tom Brady bet on himself. So did Bill Belichick.
The Explainer How to make sense of the Boston massacre
By W. James Antle III Published
-
The 13 most exciting moments of Super Bowl LIII
The Explainer Most boring Super Bowl ... ever?
By Jeva Lange Last updated
-
The enduring appeal of Michigan vs. Ohio State
The Explainer I and millions of other people in these two cold post-industrial states would not miss The Game for anything this side of heaven
By Matthew Walther Published
-
When sports teams fleece taxpayers
The Explainer Do taxpayers benefit from spending billions to subsidize sports stadiums? The data suggests otherwise.
By The Week Staff Published
-
The 2018 World Series is bad for baseball
The Explainer Boston and L.A.? This stinks.
By Jeva Lange Published
-
This World Series is all about the managers
The Explainer Baseball's top minds face off
By Tim O'Donnell Published
-
Behold, the Bud Selig experience
The Explainer I visited "The Selig Experience" and all I got was this stupid 3D Bud Selig hologram
By Anthony L. Fisher Published