Weather Tonight: 10°c Heavy rain Morning: 11°c Light rain

Critics' Choice

Film

Andrew O'Hagan

quoteAn awesome and ridiculous film that leaves you thrilled beyond the point of your natural endurancequote

Andrew O'Hagan 2012 Theatre

Fiona Mountford

quoteThe show has suddenly become quite wonderful, and the galvanising factor is the terrific stage debut of Melanie Cquote

Fiona Mountford Blood Brothers Music

John Aizlewood

quoteThe British pop music industry may be eating itself but if Muse are the pick of what it can offer the world in 2010 then British music is in rude health indeedquote

John Aizlewood Muse

Reader reviews

Theatre

Rachel Dalziel

quoteI was smitten by both Gilberts enormous luxuriant moustache and the intelligence and nuance of this highly entertaining playquote

Gilbert Is Dead Restaurants

Raja, London

quoteI totally recommend Babbo to anyone who is looking for really good and traditional Italian foodquote

Babbo Music

Katy, London

quoteAlways been a fan but never seen them live. I was ecstatic to be part of this epic event. WOW!quote

Muse

Fever Pitch as Sox lay the curse at last

By Lawrence Donegan, Evening Standard, in the USA Last updated at 00:00am on 28.10.04

 Add your view

 

Dave Roberts lifts the World Series trophy

So much for the curse of the Bambino. The longest, most infamous losing streak in American sport finally came to end early today when the Boston Red Sox defeated the St Louis Cardinals to win baseball's World Series.

With a 3-0 victory in St Louis that was routine only in its execution, the Red Sox won the seven-game series 4-0 - a result that ended 86 years without a World Series win, as well as setting off tumultuous celebrations in the city of Boston itself and among Red Sox followers across the world.

The team's normally phlegmatic owner John Henry captured the euphoria better than anyone.

"There are fans of this club who are 90 years old and who have said, 'Just one championship before I die.' Well, this one is for them," he said after Red Sox pitcher Keith Foulke had secured the final out of the game.

The result also provided a happy ending for the directors of a new, Americanised film version of Nick Hornby's Fever Pitch, in which the obsessive Arsenal fan in the best-selling book is replaced by a Boston Red Sox fan.

The movie's stars - Drew Barrymore and comedian Jimmy Fallon - were filmed taking part in the team's on-field celebrations.

Bug Selig, the commissioner of Major League Baseball, described last night's game as "historic" and for once he could not be accused of hyperbole.

Boston's last World Series victory, in 1918, is synonymous with the most notorious superstition in a notoriously superstitious sport - the curse of Babe Ruth.

Ruth - regarded as the greatest player to ever play the game - is said to have laid a curse on the team after its owners sold him to the New York Yankees following that World Series win.

Rational people laughed but as the decades passed, and Boston's misfortunes mounted, opposition fans around the States revelled in the club's failure.

Meanwhile, Red Sox fans, players and owners have developed a weary fatalism about their failure to win baseball's biggest prize. No longer.

"I don't believe in the curse," said the Red Sox's star pitcher Manny Ramirez after he was named most valuable player of the 2004 World Series. "You make your own destiny." On the evidence of the last eight games, stretching back to Game Four of American League Championship series, no one would argue.

In that series, Boston came within three outs of being eliminated by their most bitter rivals, the New York Yankees.

Somehow, they scrambled a victory and then won the next three games to take the series 4-3 - the first time in baseball playoff history that team has come back from a 0-3 deficit.

That result would have been enough for many Boston fans and for at least one Red Sox executive, who recently described the Yankees organisation as "the evil empire".

The enmity is mutual. The Yankees have now won the World Series a record 26 times, often at the expense of the Red Sox - a fact that the New York club has always been happy to rub in.

But if Boston fans were content to beat the Yankees, the players themselves refused to celebrate a famous comeback, insisting they were only interested in a World Series victory.

They attained that goal in style, although neutrals would judge the 2004 World Series to have been disappointingly one-sided.

Boston dominated almost from the first inning of Game One, although St Louis briefly threatened before succumbing to an 11-9 defeat.

Thereafter, great hitting by the Red Sox batters, combined with great pitching performances - by Curt Schilling in Game Two and Ramirez in Game Three - was more than enough to steamroller the Cardinals' mediocre starting pitching and muted batting line-up.

Last night's game followed the pattern set earlier in the series, with Boston's lead-off hitter Johnny Damon hitting a home run in the first inning.

Trot Nixon's two-run double in the third inning gave the Red Sox a 3-0 lead, which they then defended behind some excellent pitching by Derek Lowe.

The Cardinals did not threaten until the fifth inning. Edgar Renteria smacked a double to left-centre and moved to third on a wild pitch. But Lowe snuffed things out when he struck out John Mabry and Yadier Molina grounded to short-stop.

Lowe said: "It is unbelievable. When a team gets on a roll you feed off each other and that's what happened with us.

"No more going to Yankee stadium and having to listen to them chanting, '1918, 1918, 1918.' Finally, the curse is over."


Bookmark and Share
 
 

Reader views (0)

 Add your view

No comments have so far been submitted.


Add your comment

 

Your email address will not be published

Terms and conditions make text area bigger You have  characters left.


 
 


 
 
London's Weather
Tonight
Heavy rain
10°c
Morning
Light rain
11°c
5 day forecast
 
 

Daily Mail Mail on Sunday Travel Mail This is Money Metro

Loot | Jobsite | Homes & property | London jobs | FindaProperty.com | Primelocation.com | Educate London | Holiday Villas