Blogs at the CUNY Graduate School of Journalism

The Rays and the Phils, Really?

October 21st, 2008 by John De Petro

The Rays are in the playoffs. The Yankees are not.

The Phillies are in the Playoffs. The Mets are not.

The Rays are in the World Series. The Red Sox are not.

The Phillies are in the World Series. The Cubs and Dodgers are not.

Philadelphia and Tampa Bay. Not New York, Boston, Chicago or Los Angeles.

Tampa Bay and Philadelphia are two cities not know for their winning sports team. Of the four major sports, the two cities teams combine for two titles in the past 25 years. Both by Tampa. In 2002, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers won the Superbowl and the Tampa Bay Lightning hoisted the Stanley Cup in 2004.

While Tampa has had success in this decade, Philadelphians are championship starved. Philly hasn’t had a champion in it’s city since 1985 when Rocky Balboa defeated Ivan Drago in Rocky IV and no real life champ since 1983 when Dr. J and the 76ers won the NBA title. The Flyers haven’t won the Stanley Cup in over 30 when they defeated the Buffalo Sabers back in 1975 and the last time the Phillies won the World Series, 1980 when they beat the Kansas City Royals.

Even though Tampa has had recent memories of championships, the town is more synonymous with losing rather than with winning. For years the Bucs were looked upon as the doormats of the NFL. The Lightning were nothing more than another 90’s expansion team until their surprise to the cup run in ‘04. And now the team formally referred to as the Devil Rays has joined the lineage of underdog Tampa teams rebuking their inept past and quickly turning their fortunes around.

The Rays, a team who had never won more than 70 games in their 11 year history now finds themselves in the World Series. The Rays, a team who have more than twice the amount of victories, 97, than they do millions spent on salary, 43, in an age when the highest paid team, the New York Yankees had less than half as many wins, 89, than they did in millions spent on salary, 207.

Despite the lack of championships in Philadelphia, for years fans have still packed stadiums, filled arenas and cheered for-or booed at-their teams. Famous or notorious for their passion and fervor, Philly fans have always turned out in droves.

Tampa fans are less enthusiastic. 

A full crowd at a Rays or Lightning game is a rarity. Tropicana field, home to the Rays, in 2008, a season where they finished in first place for the first time in team history, averaged only 22,000 in attendance-less than half of the 45,000 capacity.

No matter what happens over the next two weeks, one of these cities will be celebrating a championship. It will be either a town just getting use to idea of being a winner or a city whose realization of a championship dream is long over due.

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