Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - Sports Curses
Episode Date: January 17, 2022Subscribe to the podcast! https://podfollow.com/everythingeverywhere/ Get Surfshark VPN at https://surfshark.deals/EverythingEverywhere - Enter promo code EverythingEverywhere for 83% off and 3 e...xtra months free! What do a goat, Babe Ruth, a witch doctor, the city of Pottsville, Pennsylvania, and a Japanese statue of Colonel Sanders all have in common? They are all supposedly responsible for curses placed upon sports teams that prevented them from winning for years, sometimes even centuries. While such curses might be difficult or impossible to prove, they certainly are real for the fans who think they are affected by them. Learn more about some of the greatest sports curses in the world and how they supposedly started, on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. -------------------------------- Associate Producers: Peter Bennett & Thor Thomsen Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Reddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/EEDailyPodcast/ Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/everything-everywhere-daily-podcast/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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What to a goat, Babe Ruth, a witch doctor, the city of Pottsville, Pennsylvania, and a Japanese
statue of Colonel Sanders all have in common? They are all supposedly responsible for curses
placed upon sports teams that prevented them from winning for years, sometimes even centuries.
While such curses might be difficult or impossible to prove, they certainly are real for
the fans who think that they are affected by them. Learn more about some of the greatest sports
curses in the world and how they supposedly started on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
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or just click on the link in the show notes. The official policy of the Everything Everywhere
Daily podcast is not that curses are real. However, regardless of whether they are real,
they certainly can feel like they're real if you happen to be a supporter of a team or live in a city,
that seems to be cursed. So let's start out with perhaps the most famous curse, at least in American
sports, the curse of the Bambino. For those of you outside of the United States and not familiar
with baseball, the person who is widely acknowledged as being the greatest baseball player of all time
is Babe Ruth. Bay Ruth literally changed the game and was one of the only players in the entire
history of the game who excelled at both pitching and hitting. He started his career in 1914 with
the Boston Red Sox. While playing for the Red Sox, they won the World Seas. They won the World Seas
the World Series in 1915, 1916, and 1918. And the Red Sox had won two more before that,
winning a total of five of the first 15 world championships. Babe Ruth was the best player
on the best team. Then in 1919, the owner of the Red Sox, Harry Frazy, sold Babe Ruth's
contract to the New York Yankees for $100,000 in cash, supposedly, according to legend,
to finance a Broadway musical. After Ruth was sold to the Yankees, the Yankees won their first
World Series in 1927, and then proceeded to win and win and win.
The Red Sox, after dominating the first 15 years of the World Series, wouldn't win another
one for 86 years.
During that 86-year stretch where the Red Sox didn't win anything, the Yankees won 26
World Series titles.
The 86-year championship drought of the Red Sox wasn't even the longest one in Major League
Baseball.
The Chicago White Sox won the World Series in 1917.
Then in 1919, the team famously lost the World Series, and several of the players were accused and kicked out of baseball for throwing the series for money.
The team became known as the Black Sox, and it was one of the greatest scandals in baseball history.
Many people feel that the 2019 team that threw the World Series put a curse on the club.
After that, the White Sox never won a World Series again for 88 years.
They didn't win until 2005, just one year after the Red Sox broke their curse.
However, the worst curse in baseball might have been the curse of the billy goat put on the Chicago Cubs.
The Cubs had last won the World Series in 1908.
In 1945, the Cubs had won the National League pennant and was finally back in contention to win the World Series again.
At game four of the series, William Cianis, owner of the Billy Goat Tavern, brought his pet goat to the stadium.
The goat was annoying the other spectators, and he and his goat were asked to leave.
He was so irate that he sent a telegram to the team's owner, Philip Wrigley, that said,
you are going to lose this World Series, and you are never going to win another World Series again.
You are never going to win another World Series again because you insulted my goat, end quote.
For years, the Cubs were pretty bad, but even when they had a chance of making the World Series,
they had terrible luck, with things like Bill Buckner letting the ball go through his legs in 1986,
or a fan named Steve Bartman interfering with a Cubs player, which cost them an out in the playoffs.
The curse was finally broken after 108 years, when in 2000.
2016, the Cubs won the World Series. As Cubs fans are fond of saying, anyone can have a bad
century. Baseball curses are not just limited to the United States. They have been seen in Japan as well.
In particular, the curse of the Colonel, which is stalked the Hanchen Tigers.
In 1985 in Osaka during the Japan series, their version of the World Series, fans of the
Hanchen Tigers were getting rowdy after a win by the team. They took a statue of Colonel Sanders,
which was sitting in the front of a Kentucky fried chicken and threw it into the river.
That win was the only win that they would have in the series,
and they went on to lose to the Sibu Lions.
Since throwing the statue of the colonel into the river,
the tigers have never won the Japan series.
In fact, they have usually been at or near the bottom of their division.
In 2009, in an effort to reverse the curse,
scuba divers went into the river and retrieved the statue.
They managed to find everything except the glasses and the right hand.
Fans of the hench and tigers say that the curse will not be lifted
until they can recover the rest of the statue.
In association football, aka soccer to us in the United States,
they've had their fair share of curses as well.
The Liverpool Football Club is one of the most successful clubs
in the history of English football.
However, after the 1989-90 season,
they went through a prolonged drought without any championships.
The goalkeeper on that last championship team, Bruce Grobelar,
claimed that a witch doctor had put a curse on the team
and that they would not win another championship
unless he urinated on all four goalposts.
Supposedly, he tried to do that in 2014, but was caught and got kicked out.
Liverpool came in second that year.
He then claimed to have splashed urine on all four posts during a charity match in May of 2019,
and that year, Liverpool won the English Premier League.
Speaking of which, doctors, a curse supposedly was cast upon the Australian national team,
the Socceroos.
Supposedly in 1970, the Australian team flew to Africa to play what was then,
and Rhodesia in Mozambique in a World Cup qualifier.
While they were there, several players hired a witch doctor to help them win.
He buried bones on Rhodesia's side of the field, and Australia won the game.
However, the witch doctor demanded a thousand pounds as payment, and the players couldn't
come up with the money.
So the witch doctor cursed the Australian team.
After that, Australia didn't qualify for the World Cup for 32 years.
In 2004, an Australian media personality named John Saffron flew to Mozambique and hired another
witch doctor to remove the curse.
Australia qualified for the very next World Cup in 2006, and they have qualified for every
World Cup since.
American football also has some notable curses as well.
Perhaps the longest-lived curse is that of the Pottsville Maroons.
Back in 1925, the National Football League was still very young, and had several teams that
were in small towns.
One of them was the Pottsville Maroons, which played in Pottsville, Pennsylvania.
In 1925, the Pottsville Maroons had to be a lot of them.
the best record in the NFL and beat the Chicago Cardinals in their final game of the season.
However, the NFL commissioner, Joseph Carr, nullified their championship and kicked them out
of the league because they played an exhibition game in Philadelphia, which supposedly
infringed on the territory of the Frankfurt Yellow Jackets, which played in Northeast Philadelphia.
The Maroons argued that the league didn't have exclusive territorial rights and that they
were given verbal permission to play the game.
The 1925 NFL championship was awarded to the Chicago Cardinals.
The Chicago Cardinals eventually became the St. Louis Cardinals and are now the Arizona Cardinals,
and they haven't won a championship since 1947.
The legend says that until the results of the 1925 season are overturned,
and the Pottsville Maroons are declared champions, that the Cardinals will never win
another championship themselves.
They currently have the longest championship drought in the NFL at 74 years.
There's probably one team that is worse than the Cardinals, and that is the Detroit Lions.
In 1958, the Lions traded away their quarterback Bobby Lane to the Pittsburgh Steelers.
When he was traded, he was reported to have said that the Lions wouldn't win again for 50 years.
Well, since then, the Lions have had the worst record of any team which was in the NFL at that time.
They haven't come anywhere close to a championship and have won only a single playoff game in 60 years.
The Steelers, the team Lane got traded to, has won the Super Bowl six times.
In 2008, the 50-year anniversary of his prediction,
the Lions went 0 and 16 completing the worst season in NFL history.
It isn't just that some teams have curses.
Sometimes it can be an entire city.
Philadelphia had a period of over 20 years
where they didn't win a championship in any of the four major professional team sports in the United States.
It was the longest drought by any city in America that had teams in all four sports.
Philadelphia sports had done quite well in the 70s and early 80s,
winning championships in hockey, baseball, and basketball,
and making the Super Bowl and football.
In Philadelphia, the tallest point in the city historically
was the statue of William Pitt, the founder of Pennsylvania,
which stood on top of City Hall.
And there has always been an unspoken agreement
that no building should ever be taller than the statue of William Pitt.
In 1987, one Liberty Place was built which became the tallest building in Philadelphia,
breaking the unspoken agreement.
The belief was that Philadelphia wasn't going to win another championship
in anything until William Pitt was once again the tallest point in the city.
And they didn't win anything for two decades.
Then in 2007, a new building became the tallest building in Philadelphia, the Comcast Center.
When the building was topped off with the very last beam, it was hoisted into place with the
traditional flag and evergreen tree.
However, on the beam was also added a five-and-a-half-inch statue of William Pitt.
When the building was complete, the tiny William Pitt statue remained on the top of the building.
The next year, in 2008, the Philadelphia Phillies won the World Series.
In November of 2017, a new building, the Comcast Technology Center, became the tallest
building in Philadelphia.
Once again, a small statue of William Pitt was placed on the top of the building.
Just three months later, in February of 2018, the Philadelphia Eagles won their first Super Bowl.
There are a lot more supposed sports curses out there, a lot of them.
They have been attributed to certain announcers, players appearing on the cover of magazines or
video games, racetracks, and even Olympic games, which occur every 40 years.
The 2020 Tokyo Games were one of the cursed games due to COVID.
However, almost all of these are just due to probability and bad luck.
In the course of doing research on this episode, I came across an article from ESPN.com
that was 20 years old.
Many of the curses they had listed 20 years ago have already been broken, including
some of the ones I already listed, but also the curse of Cleveland not winning any championships,
the New Orleans Saints, Houston Astros, San Francisco Giants, and the Chicago.
Blackhawks. There was even a curse attributed to the singer Drake, until, of course, he had
courtside seats to the Toronto Raptors winning the NBA championship. So, whatever bad trades,
witch doctors, or goats might be involved, most curses are just bad luck. Unless you are the
Chicago Bears, who have won a single championship in 59 years. In that case, you are just a horrible
team. Everything Everywhere Daily is an Airwave Media podcast. The associate producers are Thor
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