Couch Slouch: Hey Pirates, is going .500 too much to ask?

June 13, 2011 12:00 am

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As a young boy -- yes, I once was a young boy; there are photographs -- I adopted the Steelers and Pirates as my favorite teams. This was a curious decision, considering I had no ties to Pittsburgh and had never been to Pittsburgh.

Yet Roberto Clemente and Franco Harris were two of my adolescent sporting idols.

To this day, I still have never been to Pittsburgh, but I still root for the Steelers and the Pirates.

The Steelers thing has gone about as well as a fan-team relationship can go: six Super Bowl rings and eight Super Bowl appearances in a 37-season period.

The Pirates thing? Well, there was that 10-game winning streak in '04, though the team, I believe, finished with a losing record.

In fact, in '10 the Pirates managed their 18th consecutive losing season, the most for any professional sports franchise in these United States.

Over the past generation, waiting for the Pirates to win has been like waiting for a toxic dump site to sprout tulips. It's the overriding reason I have not moved to Pittsburgh.

When the Braves' Sid Bream beat Barry Bonds' throw to the plate in '92, leaving the Pirates one game short of the World Series, who knew that would be the last gasp for the Pirates over parts of two millennia?

I think it's important for baseball fans of all ages to see, in stark black and white, the enormity of the Pirates' malaise. So here are their records, season by season, from '93 to 2010:

75-87• , 53-61 (strike year), 58-86, 73-89, 79-83, 69-93, 78-83, 69-93, 62-100, 72-89, 75-87, 72-89• , 67-95, 67-95, 68-94, 67-95, 62-99 and 57-105.

(• Years in which the Pirates were sub-.500 and Couch Slouch went through a divorce.)

In all of the 20th century, the Pirates -- a proud franchise with five World Series titles and nine National League pennants -- still won only 100 games in a season twice. Already in the 21st century, the Pirates have lost 100 games in a season twice.

Heck, I was in college the last time the Pirates got to the World Series (and won it), in '79 -- this was so long ago, the University of Maryland was still graduating basketball players every few years or so.

During the last golden age of Pirates baseball, "We Are Family" would blare through the loudspeakers at home games. Now it's "We Don't Sign Free Agents."

The late 20th century was bad, but the 21st century has been worse. Since '05, the Pirates haven't had a record better than 68-94.

In 2000, then-owner Kevin McClatchy predicted the Pirates would win 90 games; they finished 69-93.

The next season, the Pirates lost 100 games -- and McClatchy raised ticket prices.

In '03, first baseman Randall Simon was fined $432.10 for disorderly conduct after clubbing a racing sausage with a bat at Miller Park in Milwaukee.

In '05, pitcher Oliver Perez went onto the disabled list with a broken left big toe after kicking a laundry cart in the clubhouse.

(This ends the "Pirates highlights portion" of the column.)

Needless to say, 18 consecutive losing years and penny-pinching management -- this season, the Pirates have the third-lowest player payroll in MLB -- have somewhat lowered expectations for most Pirates fans.

At the moment, it's a nonlethal lineup full of .240 hitters, but somehow the Pirates have crawled to 31-33 -- that's almost .500; at least there's some hope.

Hey, I'm not asking -- yet -- for this team to win the pennant or a division title or a wild-card berth or even finish ahead of Tony (Stinkin') La Russa's dreaded St. Louis Cardinals.

But would it kill these guys to go 82-80?

Ask The Slouch

Q. What ticks you off more than ex-jocks babbling in the broadcast booth? (Sean O'Hara; Jacksonville, Fla.)

A. When I go to the bank ATM to withdraw $40 in cash and the guy in front of me appears to be trying to refinance his mortgage.

Q. Do poker players have to do OTAs like pro football players? (Gary Randolph; Warrenton, Va.)

A. Yes. It's called "craps."

Q. Which professional sport will be the first to have its championship game end one day before training camp begins? (Bruce Glover; Palm Desert, Calif.)

A. Pay the man, Shirley.

Q. Did you realize you have three more rings than LeBron James? (Joe Schmidt; Strongsville, Ohio)

A. Pay this wise soul, too.

You, too, can enter the $1.25 Ask The Slouch Cash Giveaway. Just e-mail asktheslouch@aol.com , and, if your question is used, you win $1.25 in cash!
First Published June 13, 2011 12:00 am

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