Once a season gets to this point, and the team falls well out of contention, the fans, I think, are generally easier to please. Not in terms of overall satisfaction. Certainly not in terms of overall satisfaction. The fans of losing teams tend to be embittered, they tend to be frustrated, and they tend to be mad. When a team sucks like this team sucks, no fan of that team would ever describe himself as happy.
But on a game-to-game basis, I think we're willing to be content with much less than we would be otherwise. When a team's good, you want wins. Wins wins wins. All you care about are wins. When a team's bad, you want glimpses of hope, or fleeting excitement, or rarities. Someone makes an incredible play. A prospect hits a home run or throws a snapping curve. A bench guy comes through in the clutch. The question that fans of a bad team ask themselves is no longer, "did the team win?" The question becomes, "were those three hours a complete waste of my time?"
All we ask for anymore - or at least, all I ask for, and I imagine this applies to most everyone else - is that, when we tune in, it isn't a complete waste. It's really quite simple, and you'd think it would be an easy standard to meet. Not that the M's have been meeting it very often of late.
Tonight, though, they met it. While the game didn't begin with much promise and at no point through seven innings felt the least bit significant, the eighth inning brought us some real-life, genuine playoff excitement. When the Rangers put their first two on against Brandon League, it felt so familiar. League was struggling with his command. He'd coughed up several narrow leads before. It was all happening again. A Josh Hamilton grounder looked like a potential double play, which would de-claw the threat, but then Hamilton beat out the relay to first, and with men on the corners for Nelson Cruz, it felt like a certainty. It was so obvious it wasn't even worth pointing out. Cruz would deliver, the Rangers would take the lead, and the Mariners would lose another game. When Hamilton was ruled safe on a close play, I prepared myself to get mad at League for throwing Cruz the wrong pitch in the wrong place.
And Cruz, sure enough, got ahead 1-0 before lining a low fastball. The only surprising thing to me was that Cruz singled, rather than doubled or homered. Still, the single tied the game, and Jorge Cantu would probably follow through with the game-winning hit a pitch or two later. Mariners baseball.
Only Cruz didn't single. It took me a moment to register the fact that his liner to the hole was snared off the ground by Chone Figgins, who threw the ball to Jack Wilson, who flipped the ball to Casey Kotchman for an inning-ending double play. League made his mistake. Cruz hit his line drive. And the Mariners escaped with the lead still intact.
It would've been one thing had Cruz hit a slow roller, or a routine 6-4-3. That would've been fun, but it wouldn't have been the same. Cruz hit the ball hard. He hit the ball hard, and to an area such that Figgins would have to make a tremendous play just to knock the ball down. He hit the ball so hard, and Figgins made such a good play, that fans got to experience much of the full range of fan emotion in half of a second. The response was a sustained, roaring ovation. The 39-67 Mariners were jogging of the field clinging to a one-run lead, and they jogged to a standing ovation.
I cheered the double play from my own couch, and I don't do much cheering from my couch. And when David Aardsma sealed the deal with nary a fright, for just a few moments, I felt good about this team. I felt content, and I felt a little bit proud. For that player to deliver that play, and for the Mariners to win given the circumstances and the ease with which we all would've accepted a loss - we don't ask for much anymore, but this game, for me, went above and beyond. We didn't need as much as they gave. This was a treat.
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Just a few quick points:


1 recs | 5 comments
With the ball stuck in the wall and the HR off of Rajai Davis' glove, Tui gets some strange hits.
Nice to see Adam Moore catch both of those splitters that hit the ground. Both times all I could think was Rob doesn’t get those. Nice to see if his defense actually has become serviceable.
Hopefulmsfan - August 4, 2010
That was really a beautiful, amazing double play.
I too couldn’t for a full nanosecond believe Figgins caught the ball — and then the best thing about Jack Wilson is how he makes these classic SS plays and throws… in his own way really with some decisive style.
ignacio - August 4, 2010
"Matt Tuiasosopo" "sticks in Seattle."
lemonverbena - August 4, 2010
love the caption
sergey606 - August 4, 2010
I looked at Guzman too.
In 99, his rookie year, he posted a -3.1 WAR. That’s by far the worst I’ve ever seen.
mikethomas22 - August 4, 2010
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