Cubbing

Featuring the Curse of the Billy Goat

by R. Rathbone Leonard


Formats

E-Book
$3.99
Softcover
$17.95
$14.95
E-Book
$3.99

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 7/13/2010

Format : E-Book
Dimensions : E-Book
Page Count : 264
ISBN : 9781452050164
Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 264
ISBN : 9781452050157

About the Book

Right Now You Are Cubbing

 

Whether you are at Wrigley Field, discussing the baseball team at work, or reading about the Cubs—you are Cubbing.

 

Just thinking about the Cubs—you are Cubbing. Just writing about the Cubs—I am Cubbing, and pleased you have joined me as we go Cubbing.

 

In the 2009 season, the Cubs were in first place by two percentage points on July 31.

 

From the start of Spring Training as related in this book, my Cubbing comments were positive as I was positive about the 2009 season. The first three months I felt that the Cubs any day would pull away from the pack. And when in late July they started making their move, actually being in first place by a percentage point, I just knew they were on their way. As Lou Piniella would say, I really knew.

 

I said “Go, Cubs, Go” to friends and strangers alike. I placed a large placard with a W in a window. And I kept Cubbing for this book with the day-to-day games, other activities, and here and there a remembrance and comment of the Cubs in years gone by—some of them, I’m sure, never before related.

 

And then in Florida, between the second and third innings July 31, a billy goat actually walked on the field and strutted in front of the dugout mocking the Cubs. Was this a renewal of Bill Sianis’ 1945 curse? Could be. Within a week the descent had begun, the Cardinals were flying high, and the Cubs had gone into hibernation.

 

Consider this: The month of July the Cubs won 18 and lost six. Then the goat strolled. The month of August the Cubs lost 17 and won only 11.

 

The Billy Goat Curse of 1945, taking its toll once again. It must be real, really real. How else can you explain happenings such as the black cat strolling in front of Ron Santo in 1969, the Playoff failures of 1984 and 1989, the Bartman incident of 2003, and the more recent collapses, especially the Dodgers’ sweep of the 2008 Playoffs.

 

I have begun to believe. There is no other explanation. The words were uttered thusly by Bill Sianis: “The Cubs no win here no more.“

 

However, a one hundred-plus year of losing hasn’t deterred Cubbing. So join me. Let’s go Cubbing.

 

—Russ Leonard


About the Author

About The Author

 

R. Rathbone Leonard began his journalism career at age 16 as sports editor of the school paper at Culver Military Academy, and as late as mid-summer of 2006 at age 79 was an active journalist, writing a sports column for an Indianapolis suburban newspaper. In between, he worked for a Cass County (Ind.) weekly on the G. I. Bill, owned a weekly in Wabash County (Ind.), was sports editor of the Frankfort (Ind.) Times, and was a reporter, sportswriter, assistant Sunday editor, assistant state editor, and photo editor during a 23-year stint at The Indianapolis Star. Leonard attended the University of Chicago before serving in the Navy V-5 (pilot training) program during World War II. He attended St. Ambrose College (Iowa), Colorado College, Indiana University, and Ball State University where he attained a bachelor’s degree in communications. For three years, he moderated a television program on WTTV (Indianapolis), and from 1961 through 1965, published a national pro wrestling magazine. He was interim Sports Information Director one year at Indiana Central University. This is his second book.

 

 

About the Illustrators

 

John Merritt Bigelow was an acclaimed editorial illustrator for The Indianapolis Star prior to his 2003 retirement to pursue a freelancing art career. A native of Findern New Jersey, he was a graduate of Kingston (Pa.) State Teachers College. He was a high school teacher in Kokomo, Indiana, before employment with L.S. Ayres Department Store in Indianapolis as an artist in its advertising department. Bigelow was the author of several books including Frogstein’s Saucer Technology and Earth Energy: The Entrancing Force. Among his freelance work are 20 illustrations in Cubbing, drawn despite suffering from complications caused by prostate cancer. He died in October of 2009 and nine sketches were completed by his daughter, Kelsey Gail Bigelow, a graduate of the Indianapolis Herron School of Art and Design. Miss Bigelow is engaged in freelance art illustrating.