Commentary: True Rays fan rewarded after decade of struggle
When I first met Rob Meister during Orientation Week 2006, he was a human impossibility.Here stood a living, breathing oxymoron, proof that you really do meet the strangest people in college.
No, he wasn't a Libertarian; he was a Devil Rays fan.
Contrary to what you may think, Meister, now a Brown College junior, didn't become a Tampa fan by losing a bet. He's lived in St. Petersburg, Fla., the Rays' home, since 1992 and has loved the team since the day their rainbow ridiculousness first graced the Majors back in '98.
As with any proud homer, it didn't matter that Jose Canseco and Wade Boggs weren't exactly Gehrig or Ruth - "[Boggs] played for the Yankees AND Red Sox. Could there be a worse individual?" Meister says - or that Tropicana Field had as many annoying distractions as the team had wins.
"When I was young, the thing to do was catch a game with my family or friends even though the team was horrendous," he says. "I remember a couple of years ago there was a game where more fans were in attendance at the Montgomery Biscuits [Tampa's AA affiliate] game than the Rays game."
For years, this team was more laughable than Jessica Alba's film career, but they didn't have searing-hot looks to fall back on - seriously, have you ever seen Greg Vaughn? There were whispers of contraction and moves, but to the glee of Rob and the few remaining D-Rays fans, the team remained in South Florida.
"As I got older and really started to get into baseball, I became more and more excited about the Rays because of their unbelievable farm system and player potential," he says. "For the last eight years or so, I could see the light at the end of the tunnel - the pieces, though young and inexperienced, were slowly coming together."
Ever since I met him, I've mocked Rob enough to make Tina Fey proud, reminding him time and again that Ben Grieve and Elijah Dukes do not a great team make. Heck, they barely constituted a Major League squad. After all, this was a squad that popped the bubbly when they broke the 70-win ceiling. With a record of 645-876 in its first 10 seasons, Tampa could do little more than cringe and flail when another team came to town, acquiescing when the transplanted Bostonians turned the Trop into Fenway Lite.
For that first decade, seeing the Rays earn a winning record, let alone taking the pennant, was about as likely as stepping in a pile of rocking-horse manure.
"The biggest reason that we never could draw fans, I think, was because we sucked," he says. "We were awful for ten years, and who wants to see a team lose all the time?"
And yet Rob held fast, he held true, and he held on, knowing that one day, the doormats would go all "Revenge of the Nerds" on their American League bullies. Because when all else is lost, faith (that eternal wait-till-next-year syndrome) is all that remains.
"To any big baseball fan, it was pretty obvious that the Rays were positioned to improve [in 2008] - the younger players finally had some experience under their belts, and a few veterans were signed/traded for to help bring some maturity to the team," Meister said. "Also, Evan Longoria is a god among men."
Longoria's divinity may be questionable, but it is only fitting that 2008 should be the year of Tampa's break from ineptitude. In a year that a biracial man became President of the United States, when no one boycotted a Communist-hosted Olympics and when Baker is actually good in Powderpuff, the Rays made it to the World Series.
That's right, the Tampa Bay Rays won the American League pennant.
Swirl that around for a bit, gargle it and spit it out. Still tastes funny, doesn't it?
"The highlight [of the season] for me was Game 7 of the [American League Championship Series] against the Red Sox," Meister says. "Boston had all the momentum - they won Games 5 and 6, their best pitcher was on the mound, and David Ortiz had finally started hitting. Matt Garza, one of our young starting pitchers went out there and shut them down. David Price, another young guy, did a hell of a job closing the game. It was really nice to see the more inexperienced players take the lead and win the game."
But the Rays weren't just the victors; they were also the underdogs, so it's easy to see why so many people got behind the team this season. And Rob's faith, long glued to his D-Rays hat and his Joe-Maddon-look-alike glasses, has finally been rewarded.
"I'm a little bummed [that the Philadelphia Phillies won] but I'm still really, really happy and proud of this team," says Meister, whose favorite player was Fred McGriff, a Tampa native. "To go from last to first in the AL East, then beat the White Sox and Red Sox in the playoffs . . . it's pretty impressive."
Following this semester, Rob will join his friends and family in "the Burg," basking in the glow of Tampa's success. But after his team's cour-Ray-geous, mi-Ray-culous and Ray-markable postseason run, Rob is now living on Cloud Nine.
But don't think for a second that he's going to invest in any cowbells.
"No, I think [the cowbells] are stupid, but I kinda think the blue Mohawks are jazz," he says.
Casey Michel is a Brown College junior and former sports editor.
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