THAT CHAMPIONSHIP WEEKEND!
by Cash Michaels
Wouldn’t you know it?!!!
In the midst of stifling heat, high energy prices, higher food prices, and more off-the-wall shenanigans from Washington that just made you cringe, came something Americans have long missed and sorely needed.
A genuine feeling of euphoria and triumph!
In fact, the old-fashioned kind of euphoria and triumph that dedicated sports fans know only too well - when your favorite team wins a championship! Without so much as lifting a basketball or shooting a hockey puck, millions of us from here in North Carolina to the Big Apple New York City, experienced and shared something last weekend that only true sports fans could explain better.
That extraordinary cathartic feeling that comes with winning something by extension, and being part of a vast community of like-minded, high-spirited followers who stop whatever they’re doing to celebrate in small ways and large, the value of identity happiness.
What in the hell is “identity happiness” you ask? Obviously, you’ve never been fortunate enough to have had it, if you have to ask. Carolina Hurricanes and New York Knickerbocker fans know what it is instantly, because last weekend, their respective professional sports teams battled other great franchises, and came out on top as undisputed champions - masters of their own universes.
And they did it the only way true champions know how- through solid teamwork and unquestionable skills, ability, grit, dedication and heart. The kind of values Americans deep down still respect, covet and look up to.
That’s the unique value of sports competition in our society - the ability of the average Joe or Jane, no matter what their physical condition, race, gender or political affiliation, to instantly identify with a sports franchise and remain loyal supporters of that team no matter what. Attending the games, watching them on TV or listening on the radio, following their progress and growth on the news, rooting for individual players, and finding happiness through their ongoing success until one day, that team - your team - brings home the ultimate prize, a trophy and a title designating it as the absolute best there is in that sport, bar none.
I tell ya, there’s no feeling like it!
To have such devout fealty to a team, and to have it ultimately rewarded with a hard-fought for championship, is such a special relationship, because like no other synergy, neither can do without the other. Teams need devoted fans to buy the tickets, attend the games, and cheer for them from the streets to the seats.
And those fans need talented teams to compete hard, stay in shape, and always work to win. That’s giving fans their hard-earned money’s worth and rewarding their staunch loyalty. So the relationship is, indeed, a special one.
The Knicks, who had their New York City ticker tape parade on Thursday, last won a championship 53 years ago in 1973 (their second) with legends like Walt “Clyde” Frazier, Bill Bradley, Willis Reed and Earl “the Pearl” Monroe from Winston-Salem State University, among other outstanding players.
That talented lineup truly represented a big city of style, glamour and stars, making every game they played a special event, inspiring a generation of kids like me to want to emulate them both on and off the court (no, I didn’t have a closet full of fur coats, wide brim hats and tall heel shoes like “Clyde,” but I was close).
The Knicks player with the most heart then? Center Willis Reed, who during the 1970 NBA Finals 56 years ago, was seriously injured playing against the rival Los Angeles Lakers, but was unexpectedly able to walk out of the locker room to thunderous applause at Madison Square Garden for game seven, score two baskets, memorably leading his Knickerbocker team to its first championship.
In the locker room after the game, ABC sportscaster Howard Cosell told Reed on-air, "You exemplify the very best that the human spirit can offer."
Flash forward 56 years to today, where the captain of the Knicks, clutch player Jalen Brunson, displays not only skill and the will to win, but tremendous courage in how he steps up in tight spots when his team is down, and fights not only to survive, but overcome, incredibly leading his team in game four against the San Antonio Spurs from thirty points down to win, making NBA history and ultimately winning the finals, 4 games to 1.
Why do I bring up Willis Reed and Jalen Brunson?
Because as far as Knicks fans are concerned, they’re genuine inspirational heroes who put their bodies and hearts on the line when their team needed a committed leader to step into the breach. Another important value we learn from sports, along with good sportsmanship after a hard fight battle.
As for the Carolina Hurricanes, while I admittedly don’t know that much about them because I am not a hockey fan, I do appreciate the extremely tight bond the team has with created with its fanbase.
I remember well over 20 years ago, Harvey Schmitt, then president of the Raleigh Chamber of Commerce, asked me to come to his office to discuss something. Harvey used to always call me to take the temperature of Raleigh’s Black community when he had questions since I worked at the community’s newspaper, The Carolinian.
I’ll never forget that on this visit, Harvey asked me what I thought about a hockey team moving to Raleigh. I chuckled, and told the man I didn’t think they could survive here because North Carolina was ACC basketball and football country. I just didn’t see this market welcoming and ultimately sustaining what essentially was a northern-based sport in the traditional home of UNC, Duke and NC State.
Well boy, was I wrong!
Over twenty-five years and two NHL Stanley Cup championships later, the Carolina Hurricanes are here to stay, primarily because of an amazing team organization, tremendous marketing, and great buy-in from devoted fans who decided this was the type of professional sports franchise they could, and would support. And their “Caniac” excitement is contagious!
Even Gov. Josh Stein got in on the excitement after the Canes won the Cup Sunday night, issuing an “official excuse” letter Monday morning for Canes’ fans not at work because of “reasonable delays caused by celebrating, losing one’s voice, rewatching highlights, or simply recovering from the emotional toll of playoff hockey, should be forgiven.”
Be careful, Governor, or else Republicans in the legislature will try to take this power away from you too!
Now you tell me, when was the last time you saw a politician selflessly share joy with his constituents? Gov. Stein deserves big props for that, and I’m sure he’ll be at the Canes’ celebration parade in Raleigh on Saturday.
That’s yet another beautiful thing about celebrating a winning sports team. Everybody wants to naturally share the joy of victory, of coming out on top, and they don’t mind at all being in the moment with perfect strangers, because they all have a common bond of happiness.
It’s what we vitally need right now, a common bond of happiness that will, even for a little while, salve the everyday gloom all of us experience coming from an out-of-control president who sponsored a sick super-macho White House stunt event that desecrated its sanctity, turning the People’s House” and property into a disgusting grifter’s paradise for profit with a bloody, gaudy, and barbaric U.F.C. cage fighting spectacle where brains were being beaten in, and ugly things were being publicly said about the former First Lady of our nation without reason, or apology.
It felt so good not being forced to pay attention to any of that crap because the Knicks and the Carolina Hurricanes were winning the right way - without controversy, without selfishness, without lies. Only with tremendous heart, hard work, and class.
It was a championship weekend indeed, folks, and it felt so good I pray it happens again and again, real soon. All of us deserve every heartfelt celebration we can get!
Hey, I have an idea…what about in November, we all come out and vote like never before for America's Team? That's us. 'Cause when we ALL win, THAT will be a REAL championship celebration!!!
-30-



