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Home : Time Off For Play :

This Really, Really Sucks

The Agony of Defeat

Winning may not be everything, but it’s a damned sight better than getting your ass kicked.

The Catch. The Shot Heard Round the World. The Miracle on Ice. The greatest moments in the history of sport. You can almost see the players leaping, hugging, screaming with joy as everyone is showered with champagne and announces his imminent departure for Disney World.

But something’s missing: It’s the pitcher who gave up the game- winning homer, hanging his head as he walks off the field to destroy a water cooler. It’s the injured veteran struggling through his last game only to come up a yard short. It’s the dejected goalie slumped in his crease after giving up an overtime goal in the Stanley Cup.

It’s the loser. While the winners are showered with praise for their athletic prowess, no one properly humiliates the losers for their boneheaded screwups. Until now. We’ve assembled a collection of the all-time greatest players, teams, and moments of pure, unadulterated failure. It’s a collection about which we’re proud to say, “This really, really sucks.”

“We Wuz Robbed!”

Some losers aren’t born…they’re made by officials.
Ivan the Terrible
The U.S. has never lost in Olympic basketball, no matter what the scoreboard said in 1972. The U.S. led 50–49 when time ran out. Somehow, officials awarded the Soviets a do-over. The commies blew it, but a non-Olympic official demanded that the pinkos get another chance, and the U.S.S.R. scored for a 51–50 red victory. To this day, the U.S. refuses to claim their tarnished silvers. Adding insult to injury, U.S. coach Hank Iba was mugged that night, losing $370.

The Zamboni Game
Near the end of a snowy game in 1982, the Dolphins and Patriots were scoreless with Patriots kicker John Smith about to try a 33-yarder. Patriot coach Ron Meyer told stadium worker Mark Henderson (a convicted felon) to drive a snow sweeper out to clear a spot for the kick. While the Dolphins watched in disbelief, Smith’s boot was good, and the Pats robbed Miami 3–0. Ironically, the crime Henderson had been convicted of was…burglary.

The Phantom Goal
England beat West Germany in 1966 for its only World Cup title thanks to an overtime “goal” that hit the crossbar, bounced straight down, and straight into infamy. Despite protests, Soviet referee Tofik Bakhramov allowed the goal. Old World War II wounds may have been a factor—when asked to explain his call, Bakhramov said: “Stalingrad.”

Lopsided Losses

You can go down swinging, or just beg for mercy.
Georgia Tech 222, Cumberland 0
It’s hard to tell when this 1916 college football blowout got out of hand, considering the John Heisman-coached Jackets led 63–0 after the first quarter. Quote of the day: One Cumberland player told a teammate who had just fumbled, “You dropped it. You pick it up.”

Japan 44, Kuwait 1
At the 1999 Winter Asian Games, Kuwait was first drubbed by China 35–0, before facing hockey powerhouse Japan. The lone bright spot: #99 Al-Ajmi Salem—the ‘Gretzky of Kuwait’—scoring the country’s first-ever goal. “It was a great moment for Kuwait hockey on an otherwise dark day,” said coach Bruce Smith, whose team was outshot 136–3. Saddam must’ve smiled.

Bears 73, Redskins 0
The Skins had beaten the Bears 7–3 two weeks earlier, but Chicago’s Bill Osmanski took off on a 68-yard touchdown run on the second play of this 1940 NFL championship. Nine other Bears scored, and the refs eventually asked them to stop kicking extra points because they were running out of footballs.

Morningside H.S. 102, South Torrance H.S. 24
Lisa Leslie was already a phenom in 1990 when her high school took on South Torrance, who started the game with six players—and two fouled out. With her team using a full-court press and letting her take all the shots, Leslie had 101 points in the first half. Protesting “our girls have feelings too,” the South Torrance coach yanked his team at halftime and went home.

Loser Hall Of Shame
Scott Norwood
With four seconds left in Super Bowl XXV and the Bills down 20–19, Norwood tried a 47-yard field goal that a sports announcer described best: “It’s high enough…It’s deep enough…No good! It’s wide right!” At the parade in Buffalo, Norwood gave a weepy speech as fans screamed “We forgive you!” The next season, after shanking three field goals and an extra point in one game, he got the boot. While the Bills lost three more Super Bowls, Norwood went home to Virginia—to sell insurance.

Bill Buckner
To be fair, reliever Calvin Schiraldi blew a Game Six Red Sox lead so solid that the scoreboard at one point mistakenly flashed CONGRATULATIONS RED SOX. But in the 10th inning, tied 5–5, Mookie Wilson dribbled an easy grounder that mystified Buckner, scooting through his legs. Game: Mets. With death threats and daily abuse from pissed-off Sox fans, Buckner was eventually forced into exile in Idaho.

Andres Escobar
Playing for Colombia in the 1994 World Cup, Escobar inadvertently scored a goal into his own net in a 2–1 loss to the U.S. Ridiculed endlessly across his homeland, one night Escobar confronted a group of his deriders. As he got into his car to drive away, one of them pulled out a gun and emptied six shots into him, reportedly punctuating each shot by shouting “Goal!” Now you know why nobody screws with the drug cartels.

Bobby Riggs
Besides Lorena Bobbitt, nobody’s damaged the male gender more than Riggs. When he faced Billie Jean King in 1973, 40 million people watched the 55-year-old get crushed by the 29-year-old King, 6–4, 6–3, 6–3. Afterward, Riggs—who said “I love women. I think every man should have two of them”—hopped over the net to congratulate her. Nice try, Bobby, but you committed the ultimate sin: You got your ass kicked by a girl.
When these guys played, nobody won.
  1. 2000 Baltimore Ravens
    An offense that couldn't score at a sex addicts' convention, a quarterback who got cut after the season, and a linebacker who barely avoided a murder rap—sounds like championship material for sure.
  2. 1938 Chicago Blackhawks
    They finished sixth in an eight-team league, and, thanks to the worst playoff schedule ever, they never had to play the two teams with the best records in the playoffs.
  3. 1990 Colorado Buffalos
    Any team that needs five downs to beat Missouri should be playing on Dec. 26 in some rat latrine like Mobile, not winning a national championship.
  4. Buster Douglas
    His one-and-done title defense after his fluke victory against Mike Tyson was bad enough, but we really can't forgive Buster for his Mike Tyson's Punch-Out!! knockoff, James "Buster" Douglas Knockout Boxing.
  5. 1983 NC State
    If Houston coach Guy Lewis hadn't made his team play slow against the overmatched Wolfpack, we wouldn't have to watch that same clip of Jim Valvano running around like a coked-up Tourette's patient every March. We hate that fucking clip. Thanks for ruining our lives, Guy.
  6. 2006 St. Louis Cardinals
    Of the 83 victories from this two-games-over-.500 juggernaut, 23 came against the Cubs, Reds, and Pirates. Don't those only count for half a win?
  7. 1994–1995 Houston Rockets
    If Michael Jordan doesn't play a full season, it doesn't count. We also don't recognize any champion before the 1984–1985 season—take THAT, Bill Russell.
  8. Park Si-Hun
    Choosing the worst boxing decision of all time is even more difficult than picking the worst James Belushi movie (we usually go with Curly Sue). Park's "win" against Roy Jones Jr. in the 1988 Summer Olympics stands out above all others.
  9. 1984 BYU
    Any time you can squeak past a 6–5 Michigan team in the Holiday Bowl, you have to be considered the best team in the nation.
  10. 1972 USSR Olympic Basketball Team
    The Soviet Union's greatest crime against America (other than Yakov Smirnoff) needed three do-overs as freedom-hating international basketball officials conspired to help the Russians win the gold medal against the U.S.

Biggest Chokes

Because sometimes you just have to snatch a defeat from the jaws of victory.
Iron Mike gets Busted
The 37–0 Tyson, overweight, overconfident, and undertrained, stepped into the ring against 43 to 1 underdog Buster Douglas. By the 10th round Mike was lying flat on the canvas, and a once-and-future fatso was the heavyweight champion of the world. Tidbit you didn’t know: Midway through the pummeling, Tyson’s face started to swell—but Tyson’s cocky corner men hadn’t bothered to bring ice. They filled a condom with bucket water and applied it to Mike’s face, but the damage was done.

Joe Pisarcik’s Fumble
In Philadelphia, they call it The Miracle in the Meadowlands. On November 19, 1978, the Giants led Philly 17–12 with 1:23 left. On first down, QB Joe Pisarcik fell on the ball. Second down: Offensive coordinator Bob Gibson called a hand-off (huh?) to Larry Csonka. Then, unbelievably, Gibson called another run. Pisarcik screwed up the hand-off, and Philly picked up the fumble and ran for a touchdown. Gibson was fired the next day, but he’s lucky—nobody remembers his name.

The ’78 Red Flops
Everybody in New England knows Bucky Dent and his homer that sent the sad-sack Sox packing for yet another winter. What people don’t remember is the choke Boston pulled to get there. The All-Star break found the Sox up by 111/2 games. Eventually, New York tied the division with a four-game sweep that Sox fans called The Boston Massacre. Still, it all came down to Bucky Bleeping Dent and the Mike Torrez gopher ball he knocked over the Green Monster. Torrez later said, “Somebody has to be the hero, and somebody had to be the goat.” Hey, Mike—nice horns.

Van Crash
Jean Van de Velde was an unheralded nobody until the 1999 British Open. At the 18th tee on the final day, he held an apparently foolproof three-stroke lead. But then, as one commentator said, “His golfing brain deserted him.” A few minutes later, after taking seven shots that visited grandstands, water, and almost everything else in his path to the cup, he lost to Paul Lawrie in a playoff. Afterward, Van de Velde protested, “Who’ll remember in 100 years?” Jean, that’s why we’re here.

Miller Nixes the Knicks
Nobody has tortured the Knicks as much as Reggie Miller. In a 1994 playoff game, he torched New York for 25 fourth-quarter points, giving Spike Lee the famous choke sign. But the big choke came one year later, when the Knicks gagged up eight points (and one steal) to Miller in the final 16.4 seconds, giving Indy a 107–105 win. “They happen to luck up and win one and you should be humble,” groused Knick John Starks.

Cursed Franchises

No matter how good the players are, no matter how strong the will to win, sometimes God just hates you.
1899 Cleveland Spiders
Imagine the worst team ever. Then imagine them beating the Spiders 19–3. Owner Frank Robison, who also owned the St. Louis Browns, shipped all his talent—including Cy Young—to St. Louis. Shafted Spiders fans stayed away in droves (total season attendance: 6,088). During the year, Cleveland lost 24 games in a row and dropped 40 of their last 41. They finished the year 20–134, only 35 games out…of 11th place. (84 out of first.) The league was so disgusted that at the end of the season, they voted the Spiders out of existence.

Prairie View (Texas) A&M
The king of gridiron futility, Prairie View lost 80 consecutive games. What made the Panthers’ streak even more pathetic is that they ended it in 1998 against lowly NAIA school Langston University. (They’d begun it by losing to Langston in 1989.) After the glorious 14–12 squeaker that ended the streak, safety Quincy Fuller got emotional: “Now we will live forever.” Yeah, in infamy, you schmuck.

L.A. Clippers
Thanks to the Clippers, the NBA draft has become a premiere tragedy. Each year GM Elgin Baylor takes his seat among the NBA losers and prays for another top pick to take the Clippers nowhere. During their 16 years in L.A., the Clips have lost more than twice as many games as they’ve won (410–870), including a memorable ’86–’87 campaign when they went 12–70, and the lockout-shortened ’98–’99 season, which the Clips ended at a miserable 9–41.

The Andrettis
Not everyone gets their own curse, but the Andretti family is deserving: Between patriarch Mario, sons Michael and Jeff, and nephew John, they’ve enjoyed 31 years of Indy futility since Mario’s lone winner’s circle back in ’69. Typical race: In 1992, when Michael was 10 laps from a win, with both his dad and brother in the hospital after crashes, an engine belt broke.

Chicago baseball
Red Sox fans have it easy. Try living in a town with two teams that can’t win. They may have been decent this year, but the White Sox last won the World Series in 1917. The Cubs are truly lame, making their last appearance in the series in 1945, where they lost to the lowly St. Louis Browns. To find a Cubs championship, you’ve got to go back to 1908. That’s a combined 175 years of futility. “How do the owners of the Chicago Cubs get through it?” Donald Sterling, owner of the L.A. Clippers. once asked. Hey, Cubs! The Clippers feel sorry for you.

Last-Minute Losers

These athletes may have been the stuff of legend, but they definitely went out with a whimper.
Dan Marino
Sure, he’s one of the best quarterbacks in NFL history, but Marino finished with the worst performance of his life, a 62–7 shellacking by Jacksonville in last year’s playoffs. The Jags were leading 38–0 before Marino even completed a pass. He fumbled once, threw two interceptions, and ended up passing for just 95 yards. He had to beg Jimmy Johnson to let him back on the field for the second half. Next stop, Canton—but that was one hell of a speed bump.

Babe Ruth
One of baseball’s greatest careers came to an ugly end as The Babe, offered one measly dollar to play for the Yankees, signed on for his last season with the lowly Boston Braves. The Sultan of Swat, as one teammate put it, could “hardly run, and couldn’t even bend down to pick up the ball.” By the end of June 1935, batting .181 with six home runs, Ruth was released. The saddest part? Babe had signed with the Braves at least partly because they’d promised him the manager’s job. He never got it.

Muhammad Ali
Ali’s final fight, a 1981 shoving match with Trevor Berbick, could not have been more pathetic. Ali was a month shy of 40, overweight, and already suffering from neurological problems. His physician, Ferdie Pacheco, called it “nothing short of criminal.” In the seventh round, an embarrassed Berbick told the referee “He’s hurt!” and stopped punching. Ali lost by decision, and later admitted that his last fight should have been the Rumble in the Jungle—seven years earlier. “I didn’t do that bad,” The Greatest decided after the fight. That pretty much says it all.

Gordie Howe
Still admired and feared by opponents, Howe played in all 80 games and the All-Star game during his final season, at the amazing age of 52. No doubt about it, Howe is one of the two or three greatest players in NHL history. Unfortunately, he chose to leave the game as one of the silliest. Determined to become the only hockey player to play in six decades, the 69-year-old Howe suited up with the minor-league Detroit Vipers in 1997 and “skated” one 47-second shift, never even touching the puck. The worst part? Tough call, but probably Gordie Howe emerging with the rest of the Vipers from an inflatable green snake head onto the ice.

Maxim

Maxim

One-Sided Rivalries

True tales of total, never-ending domination.
AFC vs. NFC
The AFL got its kicks back in Super Bowl III with Joe Namath’s Jets victory, and the AFC followed with great Miami and Pittsburgh teams in the 1970s. After that, things got ugly. From 1982 and 1997, the NFC won 15 of 16 Super Bowls: Bears 46, Patriots 10; 49ers 55, Broncos 10; Cowboys 52, Bills 17. John Elway’s Broncos ended the streak with wins in ’98 and ’99, but Kurt Warner’s Rams could have the NFC on another run.

Chamberlain vs. Russell
We’ll give Wilt his props: If he was half the man he claimed, he’s got Bill Russell (and the rest of us mortals) trumped in the babe category. And Wilt crushed Bill in individual stats, averaging 28.7 points and 28.7 boards in head-to-head meetings to Russell’s 14.5 and 23.7. But Russell made a career out of letting Wilt rack up the points while the Celtics kept raising banners in Boston Garden. Russell’s Celts went 87–55 against Chamberlain’s Warriors, 76ers, and Lakers, and 7-1 in the playoffs. It’s enough to drive a guy to Viagra.

Ivan Lendl vs. Wimbledon
Not since JFK has anyone had more reason to hate grass than Lendl. Despite being ranked No. 1 in the world for 270 weeks, Lendl never got his hands on the silver plate, despite seven trips to the semifinals. Eventually he just skipped Wimbledon, telling reporters that he was “allergic to grass.” Then he showed up on a golf course two days later.

U.S. vs. the Far East
We may have invented the game of baseball, but in Little League, our tykes always get crushed by tiny Asian thugs. Since 1967, we’re a sad 3–22 against the Far East in the Little League World Series. Sure, Japanese kids may only be able to look forward to a career with the Yakult Swallows, but it still sucks.
The Agony of Defeat / Crappiest Champions Ever. Maxim. November 2000 / May 2007.

Major League Losers: The Real Cost of Sports and Who's Paying for It Major League Losers: The Real Cost of Sports and Who's Paying for It

Dazzled by visions of economic growth and enhanced prestige for their communities, state and local government leaders have created a veritable welfare system for major league sports. This system has pampered owners by providing them with new stadiums and arenas, investment opportunities, luxury suites, and practice facilities. Why should the public fund these franchises when the sports industry is so successful? In Major League Losers, Mark S. Rosentraub explains the history of this practice and reveals the surprising fact that cities gain little from hosting a major league ball club. He provides government officials and taxpayers with a clearer understanding of how a city can, and should, negotiate with sports franchises. This new, concise edition includes a discussion of the recent fight by the New York Yankees and other teams to gain new stadiums.




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