|
Return
Back to Recent Press Clips
SI.com
- In Massachusetts, sports and
politics go together like red and sox Scott
Brown,
a little-known Republican state senator from Wrentham, Mass., last week
pulled off one of the most shocking upsets in the long history of Bay
State politics when he defeated Democrat Martha Coakley in a
special election to fill the empty U.S. Senate seat left by the late Ted
Kennedy. It
was a national shocker. Massachusetts sends a Republican to congress
about as often as the Cubs win the World Series, and Brown trailed by as
many as 30 percentage points in early polling. But
Brown gained momentum through the holidays and got his final boost when
Coakley stated in an interview that Curt Schilling was a Yankee
fan. That's
right, boys and girls. She said that
Curt Schilling was a Yankee fan. And that closed the curtain on her bid
for the U.S. Senate. Welcome
to Massachusetts, where it's always about sports, politics and revenge. Coakley
tried to recover from her gaffe, later saying that she was joking.
Nobody was buying. The comment was a clear sign that she was out of
touch with the rank and file. Anybody who lives in greater Boston simply
has to know that Schilling is the embodiment of Boston's long-awaited
conquest of the Yankees in 2004. Schilling
a Yankee fan? That's like calling Kobayashi a vegetarian. It's
like calling Keith Olbermann a right winger. It's like calling Bill
Belichick a comedian. When
Schilling was acquired by the Sox in November 2003, his first remark
was: "I guess I hate the Yankees now.'' He pledged to end the Curse
of the Bambino and then went out and did it in his first Fenway season,
famously bleeding into his sock when he won Game 6 of the 2004 ALCS at
Yankee Stadium. Trying to win a Massachusetts election after calling
Schilling a Yankee fan is like driving a Toyota while you're running for
governor. You've got no chance. The
Schilling blurb was not Coakley's only sports-related blunder. Scott
Brown made friends on New Year's Day by standing outside Fenway Park and
shaking hands with the hearty souls who had scored tickets to the
Bruins-Flyers Winter Classic. When Coakley was chided for being too
passive late in her campaign, she snapped, "As opposed to standing
outside Fenway Park. In the cold? Shaking hands?'' Big
mistake. In our town sports and politics are intertwined like strands on
a double helix. You rarely see one without the other. Boston
mayor John Fitzgerald, a.k.a. "Honey Fitz", threw out
the ceremonial first pitch before the first game ever played at Fenway
in April 1912. Fitz's daughter, Rose, was on hand for the occasion and
she would later become Rose Kennedy, mother of JFK and
Senators Bobby and Ted. FDR held a rally at Fenway days
before the 1944 presidential election and Eugene McCarthy made a
stop at the Boston ballpark during his run in 1968. An
ailing Ted Kennedy threw out the first pitch at the Sox home opener last
April. When
Massachusetts governor Michael Dukakis lost his bid for
re-election in 1978, he blamed the collapse on the Red Sox. That was the
summer the Sox blew a 14-game lead and lost the one-game playoff to Bucky
Dent and the Yankees, and Dukakis believed he was beaten because the
entire region was depressed. Most
recently Schilling has mixed sports and politics in Boston. A dedicated
Republican, never shy about giving his opinion, the big Blowhard
actually considered running for Kennedy's seat in the early weeks after
the congressional lion passed away. Ever the glory hound, he announced
he wasn't running on HBO's Joe Buck Live. Celtics
owner Steve Pagliacu did run for Kennedy's seat, and poured
millions of dollars of his own money into the race, but was soundly
defeated by Coakley in the Democratic primary. Back in the old days, the
Celtics had some bad luck when they were owned by John Y. Brown,
who became governor of Kentucky. Red Auerbach almost left the
Green because of John Y. Brown. Longtime
Massachusetts state auditor Joe DeNucci was a world-ranked boxer
before he entered the political arena. Former Boston mayor Ray Flynn
was a basketball star at Providence and was drafted by the Celtics in
1963. Doug Flutie, Steve DeOssie, Fred Smerles and
Schilling were among those who actively campaigned for Scott Brown and
it would not be surprising if any of them ran for office on their own
someday. Think Larry Bird would have gotten any votes if he ran
for governor of Massachusetts sometime in the early 1990s? Ray Allen
already looks like a politician. Oh,
and then there's this fellow named Tom Brady. Brady
has it all. He's got the looks, the charisma, the fame and he's remained
politically neutral on just about everything. He got into a little hot
water when he accepted an invitation to one of George Bush's
State of the Union addresses, but has otherwise steered clear of
polarizing issues. Tom
Brady for President. Someday. He'd
never say that Curt Schilling was a Yankee fan. |
|
| Mailing Address:oseph DeNucci
P.O. Box 600252 Newton MA 02460 Office Location: 259 Walnut St Newton, MA 02460 Phone: 617.630.0600 Fax: 617.630.0625 E-Mail: HDQ@JoeDeNucci.com |
|