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Around SBN: Pro Combat Goes B1G: Minnesota Edition

Boston's Lost Cause

The little-known (but incredibly true) story of Boston's most loyal baseball fans (who, by the way, hate the Red Sox).

Apr 23, 2011 - While looking over this year's interleague schedule, I was saddened to see that the Red Sox won't play the Braves this season. Only a few years ago they were each other's "natural" rivals, owing to the time, all but forgotten now, when the Braves played in Boston, and Hub baseball fans had their choice of two teams to root for.

It seems when the Expos moved to Washington, the East divisions' interleague rivalries got jumbled, and the Sox were the last team standing when the music stopped. Now paired with the Phillies, a team with whom they share no history, the Sox likely won't face Atlanta again until 2013. And thus, a great tradition has been smothered in its infancy: Braves games at Fenway Park.

Believe you me, you don't want to be anywhere near Section 33 of Fenway when the Atlanta Braves are in town. On those nights, that area belongs to the rabid contingent of aging but still loyal Boston Braves Boosters, whose fealty to the Bees has survived fifty years and two franchise re-locations. (Section 33 was chosen because of its ample wheelchair seating and quick access to the park's only elevator.)

The only organized Boston baseball fans who actively despise the Red Sox, the BBB attend every Braves-Sox game to loudly cheer on the National Leaguers, and "really give it to the local nine and their fair-weather fans," according to BBB president Gus Farnsworth. During games they ring cowbells and hold up signs featuring popular Booster slogans like, "If We're Brave, Then What Are You?" and "Any Idiot Can Wear Sox."

I had a chance to attend a Boston Braves Boosters meeting last October in Brookline, a stone's throw away from the Braves' old stomping grounds. They were celebrating both the playoff absence of the Red Sox ("those crimson-hosed Johnny-come-lately upstarts of Boston baseball," as they're colorfully described in the BBB charter), and the Boosters' 57th anniversary. But to be honest, the proceedings felt more like a wake. Two members had passed away the previous month (the Boosters' average age is 89.3), and their secretary had just been hospitalized with "a bad bout of consumption."

Mimicking the efforts of Save Fenway Park, a grassroots organization that successfully lobbied for the renovation (as opposed to destruction) of the Red Sox's home, the Boosters hired a local architect (the great-grandson of BBB treasurer Asa Bridwell) to draw up provisional plans for a replica Braves Field–in the exact same spot as the old park. Though the project's momentum has cooled of late, the quixotic Boosters are hopeful their team might someday return to the City on a Hill.

"I think they'll come back. We've got the fans, we've almost got the park. Hell, they'd be crazy not to. They've just got to come back," Farnsworth told me, his voice starting to quiver.

"I'm sure you're right, Gus," I said, quickly turning away. My eyes welled with tears.

"They'll come back."

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Jason Brannon

Hot Corner Scribe

Jason Brannon is a sometime research assistant to Rob Neyer, wrote a chapter for Rob Neyer's Big Book of Baseball Blunders, and plays drums with Oh,... Read full bio


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Enitrely True, All of It

Not that I “looked it up,” but I’m positive Jason Brannon is incapable of lying.

by Carson Cistulli on Apr 23, 2011 12:48 PM EDT reply actions  

Very cool.

Thinking about it now, I think I’d prefer the alternate universe where the Braves stay in Boston. Atlanta can get an expansion team later anyway. Relocated teams end up having their history splintered off into some kind of strange limbo.

Would the Braves have developed into the Mets of Boston?

by Freneau on Apr 23, 2011 1:49 PM EDT reply actions  

Well,

Considering how the Red Socks have totally sucked up until 2003, perhaps they would have been the Mets of Boston?

Believe Big! I mean HUGE... believe Gigantic! like the Titanic.
Mariners Baseball: Believe Big.

by Robert Praetor on Apr 23, 2011 7:38 PM EDT up reply actions  

The 11th Inning

One less Timmy Barnicle anecdote and Burns could have had this story in his last documentary…will be in the next one for sure. I can’t wait to see a slow zoom on this picture in “The 11th Inning.”

by tpstoner on Apr 23, 2011 2:07 PM EDT reply actions   2 recs

A few years ago

I was talking to my grandparents about how they grew up in Hew Hampshire. I asked them about how nice it must be for them to see the Red Rox’s doing well. They scoffed at me and told me they were Brave fans.

Believe Big! I mean HUGE... believe Gigantic! like the Titanic.
Mariners Baseball: Believe Big.

by Robert Praetor on Apr 23, 2011 7:36 PM EDT reply actions  

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