Ladies and gentleman. Your 2009 world champions Los Angeles Lakers. AP Photo/Matt Sayles
Our Zack Jerome
They conclude in their little piece by saying Boston is having a better sports decade here in the aughts than LA did in the 1980s. I read it over and over again, but I don’t understand their special brand of Boston logic. I mean you can read the final count of titles in the respective decades below, and I come up with LA winning that battle.
Within their justification they say some things that are amusing to say the least.
Let’s see what they said.
Baseball.
To quote them:
Seriously, "The Homer" could be from anyone (Mazeroski? Aaron? Duane Kuiper?), but "The Steal", "The Sock", "The Slap" and "The Comeback", are pretty much locked up for good. As far as we're concerned.
As Zack mentioned, everyone in the sports world gives the Red Sox a ton of credit in 2004 to come back from a 3-0 deficit in the ALCS against the Yankees to vault them to their first World Series victory since 1918. That was an amazing feat that will most likely not be repeated in baseball.
And let me give kudos to Curt Schilling for pitching without a landing foot. Although the bloody sock has been overplayed due to the nature of media this decade, it doesn’t and shouldn’t diminish those six innings Schilling gave to the Red Sox.
But saying the Kirk Gibson home run could be from anyone? Let’s remind these folk that Gibson had a hard time standing up much less hitting a walk-off home run in a World Series game against the most dominant closer that season and former Red Sox Dennis Eckersley. Gibson could barely stand after fouling off Eckersley pitches. But he had enough arm strength to hit that 3-2 backdoor slider out to the right field pavilion and history was made.
In fact that hit was so memorable that on Saturday Night Live that followed the World Series game, that home run ball “landed” in the “Weekend Update” desk.
People everywhere were talking about that home run the next day, and they still talk about it. On most countdown shows of most memorable home runs that one tops the list next to “The Shot Heard ‘Round the World.” So to say that Dave Roberts’ steal in game four of the ALCS compares to that moment is just sheer lunacy.
Also can someone tell me what “The Slap” is? I watched every game of that ALCS and World Series in 2004, but I have no idea what that is. Sorry.
Football.
I’ll give the folks in Boston this. However let me add a caveat that college football should be counted. While neither USC nor UCLA won championships during the 1980s they were both fairly decent. Boston College this decade has been decent in the middle of the decade, so it confuses me why they don’t want to include college football.
Hockey.
This is a push, but let’s not omit one of the more memorable games in playoff hockey: The Miracle on Manchester in 1982.
With the series tied 1-1, the Kings and the Edmonton Oilers came back to The Forum for game three. Wayne Gretzky and the Oilers dominated the Kings leading 5-0 after two periods. But in the third period the Kings fought back and tied the game 5-5 in regulation.
In overtime left winger Daryl Evans’ slap shot gave the Kings the victory. The Kings would go on to win the series in five games, however they would lose to the Vancouver Canucks in the next round.
Basketball.
Number of NBA titles the Lakers won in the 1980s: five. 1980, 1982, 1985, 1987, 1988. With the exception of the 1981 season, the Lakers made it to at least the conference finals every year in the decade and never had a losing season.
Number of NBA titles the Celtics won in the 2000s: one. To top that off they have four losing seasons, although given the state of the Eastern Conference in one of those seasons they actually made the playoffs.
If you notice in Bostonist’s argument they don’t even make this one. I’m not going to sit here and write about Celtics-Lakers head-to-head because it’s a losing battle. Historically they have whooped us. But we’re trying to make the argument between 1980s Los Angeles teams and 2000s Boston teams. Don’t get it twisted.
Overall
LA Titles in the 80s
1980: Lakers
1981: Dodgers
1982: Lakers
1983: Raiders
1984: none
1985: Lakers
1986: none
1987: Lakers
1988: Lakers, Dodgers
1989: none
Total: Eight titles.
Boston Titles in the 00s
2000: none
2001: Patriots
2002: none
2003: Patriots
2004: Patriots, Red Sox
2005: none
2006: none
2007: Red Sox
2008: Celtics
2009: to be seen, but I’m going to guess none.
Total: Six titles.
8-6. The numbers don’t lie Boston. As you guys know very well from 1919 to 2003 you lose.




MLS: 2002 and 2005, New England Revolution got to the Finals and lost, to....drumroll...LA Galaxy. 1 - 0, in extra time, on both occasions.
Did I forget to mention the 2002 loss was at Gillette Stadium? And that NE also made it to the finals in 2006 and 2007 and lost those two as well?
Revolution = MLS version of Buffalo Bills
Well because there was no MLS in the 80s I didn't count it.
Is cool. I just thought it would be a funny jab at them given they lost to us TWICE. LOL
Im pissed... That homer absolutely COULD NOT have come from anyone else. Especially any of that crew from Sox. If they are injured like Gibby was they dont even PLAY much less lean out and smack a backdoor slider off the greatest closer in the game at that time. Insanity... Seriously.
"The Slap" is when Bronson Arroyo went to tag ARod in Game 6 of that '04 series...
http://www.amazon.com/Bronson-Arroyo-Boston-Red-Sox/dp/B0012FN5KE
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/10/21/sports/baseball/21arod.html
Oh ok. That's stupid. People in Boston really call that memorable in light of what happened in that series? Geez.
Seriously... How lame.
UGH. I read the article on the evil-four-letter.com and I can't say I was surprised that it favored Boston. The basis of every sports argument that emanates from the East Coast sports establishment is that if it happens there, it means more. It. Just. Does. The logic is absolutely asinine.
I grew up in the Bay Area and still have nightmares about Kirk Gibson ruining my 1988, so i have no love for LA sports, but ESPN and Bostonist are clearly high. Also, fwiw Anaheim is closer to LA than Foxboro is to Boston, so the '02 Angels and '07 Ducks titles count just as much as Spygate Bill's superbowls do.
The Anaheim titles don't really count since none of them were won in the 80s.
When it comes to basketball...
http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/playoffs/2009/columns/story?columnist=hollinger_john&page=FranchiseRankings-Lakers
and 33 wins. most out of any professional sports team. and this was when they didn't fly charter, and had back to back to backs.
of course I guess the method of travel isn't important- the 21st century celtics did lose 20+ games in a row.
Don't worry, guys. I'll squeeze a packet of ketchup on Clayton Kershaw this postseason, and we'll instantly declare it the #1 sports moment of all time.
But I'll 1-up Sox Nation by squeezing it on his crotch and Vin Scully can say, "His dick is bleeding and he's still pitching! Kershaw should run for the senate!"