The Case for Cleveland
2015-04-28Editor’s Note: This piece was written before the events of Sunday, but I believe it is more relevant now than ever. As someone who didn’t grow up in northeast Ohio, but adopted it as my home and chose to raise a family here, this piece resonates with me. I believe a Cleveland championship is still within this team’s grasp. I believe that, at their best, sports have the ability to elevate and unify us as citizens of this great country and this great state. That is something worth hoping for. We all could use a dose of hope today. Hope and anticipation always trump despair and worry when rolling over the potholes on the road to a goal. Thanks for writing this, Cory. -Nate
We all have to come from somewhere and have little choice in the matter. A long time ago, ambitious men drew lines on paper to divvy up soil to segregate ourselves from one another, and our minds are so powerful, or so weak, that today we believe that those boundaries are natural. As time passed those lines defined where we were from and who we are. Different sets of customs, speech and mores arose. Where you’re from is probably something simple like where your grandfather found work or where your mother forgot to take a pill. For Northeast Ohioans, that work was breaking their bodies in the mile long mills that built America. Coke ovens spitting out heat so hot that it would make the devil himself blush forged the ivory tower of the American Empire. Our lines are often described as flyover country, a place to ignore in between the flight between the coasts. It’s a time and place to be forgotten. Every passing year, the powerful marriage of iron and carbon is forgotten a little more, and the red headed bastard child slowly percolates. The rust is swallowed by the rich glacial soil that once feed our grandfathers. The rust is in our rivers and lakes. The rust is in our corn and apples. The rust is in the breast milk we feed our young.
Cleveland is treated in the sporting world as untouchables, as if our mere existence lowers the American standard for a utopian society. We are the leper from Watts of the sports world. Some of our criticism is justified. We certainly aren’t well adjusted sports fans. We over-analyze everything. We can throw together analogies and laugh that we’re the battered women of the sports world, but we’re really a generation that’s been beaten with a switch by a subterfuge for decades and we refuse to leave. Our fandom is maladaptive behavior and we know it. There were times in LA that I was legitimately jealous of my friends who could take a sabbatical from their teams until they were good again. In a strange way, I became a bigger Cavs fan after LeBron left as if my fandom was challenged. I’m not the only one. We may have been a little overzealous and celebrated our first postseason win in five years a little too hard. We might have dropped a little too much confetti, but we’ve got brooms to clean it up, and our brooms can sweep more than just confetti.
We’ve evolved so far as a society that racism and bigotry are no longer acceptable behavior, but we still have sportism. We need something to unite and divide us from one another. It’s our way to vent our hate. We’ve evolved everything in life but ourselves. We’re still savages. Cleveland is the low hanging fruit of the media monster. We’re the people the cokeheads on the coast mock to make them feel better about their own insecurities. Let them. They need to us to elevate themselves. I didn’t always handle the Cleveland mockery well, and my retorts ranged from telling New Yorkers what their great grandmothers did to Boss Tweed in a Bowery bathroom, to telling Angelenos that their ancestors were dust bowl Grapes of Wrath hillbillies who didn’t have the fortitude to wait out the drought. The drought. That’s the bullet point. The 50-year title drought has defined us, like snowballs symbolize Philly. I’ve questioned if a Cleveland team winning a title would actually change anything. Would producers shelve the Cleveland sports failure package? Would journalists have to stop dusting off <ahref=”http://www.boston.com/sports/basketball/celtics/articles/2010/05/03/no_mistaking_it_he_loves_cleveland/” target=”_blank”>old articles and actually write new content every year?
Throughout this season, the talking heads have tried to divide us and the Cavs lockeroom. In the end, the roster was united. The rust is where I see the bond between Dan Gilbert and LeBron too. They are the only members of the Cavs organization that share it. Both are self-made, and their journeys couldn’t possibly have been more different, but through time, pressure and chance, they’ve forged a diamond together. Their relationship will surely be the subject of a documentary. The bitter breakup and reunion. The Decision, The Letter, The Return and the end of the drought.
A title could change a few things though. The world would have to take notice that Cleveland is no longer the bastard from a basket of the sports world. Perhaps the self-hate that we’ve developed over games played by millionaires would be gone. If this is where the drought ends, we’ll finally feel vindication for the first time in a generation. We’ll be able to show the world that rust is beautiful and we wear it proudly. We’ll celebrate so passionately that breweries will run out of beer. The parade past the river of fire will be attended by a million fighting back tears in unison. After the celebration, we’ll return to our everyday problems. We’ll go back to breaking our bodies just to get by, and over medicating ourselves. Years from now, one by one, we’ll rejoin one another again for a reunion in the dirt and we’ll give our bones back and we’ll feed the soil the rust that feed us.
Moved to Cleveland a decade ago, decided to make my life here.
Count me in for the “reunion in the dirt” – great poetry!
Well written, hard felt emotional write up, thanks for all the effort. It would have been a tremendous success to win the championship with our team at full strength. A team that really only played together for what …45 games? As compared to a Spurs team that has what….. 500 games of synergy. I’m not saying we couldn’t do it, just that it would have been a great feat. As much as it hurts not having KL, what a Cinderella story it will be if we make it to the finals. The headlines of trying to win a ring for… Read more »
@mcten: According to Bovada sports book in Las Vegas, CLE still has the 2nd best odds to win it all (12-to-5) even with Love out. GSW 1st (8-to-5)
I left Ohio when I was 5 in 1963. My dad worked for fledgling NASA and we moved top Florida. Since there were no sports teams at the time in Florida, I retained my love for Cleveland teams. Even as Florida got Sports teams, the Cavs, Indians and Browns were always MY teams. Even the old Cleveland Whalers would have me tuned to 3WE on my transistor radio hidden under my pillow when I was supposed to be sleeping. I may not have a true feeling of what being a blue collar Rust Belt Clevelander is, but damn, I live… Read more »
Man, you made a bad decision,. You could’ve been a Dolphins fan in the 1970s. That would’ve be fun. Or a Marlins fan and won two titles fairly recently. Or a Heat fan and won 3 titles in the last 10 years.
Go back in time and have a talk with your 5 year old self.
Here’s to LeBron and Kyrie going hero mode and willing us to the Finals and a title.
I can’t believe Love is out for the postseason. I just can’t believe it.
Yep. Total game-changer.
The upside is that we could be in for some transcendent individual play. Kyrie is gonna be huge.
Outstanding piece. I’m sure more than a few were tearing up at the end
double goosebumps—the past 2 days HAS UNITED US / THE LAND more than ever —-mentioned yesterday I think LeBron ” welcomes ” the underdog role ——great article and blogs ( as usual ) —I worked the steel mills as a summer job while going to college —-1 of my proudest moments came one Friday when the ” VETERANS ” INVITED ME TO GO JOIN THEM AT THE LOCAL WATERING HOLE —–I CARRY / WEAR THAT SAME PRIDE BEING A LOYAL CAVS / CLEVELAND FAN ——-GO CAVS—NO EXCUSES—NEXT MAN UP !!!!
Maybe Dan Gilbert and LeBron James can save the Rust Belt: Gilbert with his investments, LeBron with his philanthropy — and the two of them together, hopefully, with a championship one of these years.
Goosebumps. This blog rules.
@SamAmicoFSO: Cavs GM David Griffin on JR Smith suspension: I’m 100 percent sure the league doesn’t care what I think.
@SamAmicoFSO: Cavs GM David Griffin on life without Kevin Love (and 2 games without JR Smith): I don’t expect us to just survive. I expect us to thrive.
@RuiterWrongFAN: Griffin making it pretty clear Kevin Love essentially done for the season #Cavs
Ugh. I figured with the ligament damage.
It probably means he needs surgery. Time to embrace the underdog role, because we are the underdog going forward in almost any matchup.
It’s not the same thing and I’m not a doctor and I didn’t stay at a holiday inn express after getting loaded last night, but when I tore my thumb ligament they told me it would not repair itself if it was a total tear without surgery. A partial tear, yes, but not a total tear.
Here’s a little more detail (not much). Don’t see a story up yet.
@ChrisBHaynes
#Cavs GM David Griffin says surgery is an option for Kevin Love and he calls it a surprise if he could return for postseason.
Terrific piece, Cory. I spent 27 years as a NEOhioan. The rust, like Cleveland sports is in my blood. Though I’ve resided in Los Angeles for the last 18 years, and have had plenty of opportunities to live vicariously through the Lakers, Dodgers, Kings, Clippers and Angels, I’ve never abandoned my addiction to the Cavs, Browns and Indians. I’ve often said in the slightly paraphrased words of Jake Gyllenhaal’s Jack Twist: “I wish I knew how to quit you, Cleveland.” There are people older and younger than me who have never seen a Cleveland championship. Some of the fortunate ones… Read more »
The team should be even better next year after turning in Haywood’s contract for a high-caliber player. This team will own the NBA for years.
It would have been easy to say that about the Big 3 Celtics but they only were able to get 1. It’s hard.
They were way older. We have prime Love, prime Irving, and mostly prime LBJ for the next 3-5 years.
I agree with Cols. I CAN”T BELIEVE IT. I AGREE WITH COLS!!!
Here’s the deal. The East sucks. We can beat the Bulls missing 2/5 of our starting lineup and then take down the Hawks or Wizards missing Love.
The problem is the Finals. We cannot beat the Warriors without Love playing near 100%. I guess 90% would do, but that’s going to be a tough series.
So we have to hope he is ready by the time we reach the Finals.
Completely agree with this, especially after watching the Bulls and Hawks lose last night. Hopefully Love’s shoulder is ready to go in a month.
Well then it looks like LBJ is going to have to summon an otherworldly, Jordan-esque performance and earn top-10 all time status he craves.
He’s already top 10 status.
Actually, the Warriors are just as scary with or without Love. The Spurs and the Grizz are problematic. They play with real bigs in their frontcourt. The Cavs are probably fine going small against most teams, but against the Spurs or Grizzlies, Love is essential.