Editor’s note: This is Terence Moore’s last column for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Terence has decided to take a voluntary buyout, ending a stellar 24 years as a sports columnist. Terence sums up his time this way: “My objective was to get people to think, not to agree or disagree, just to get people to think.” We thank him for making all of us think and wish him the best as he moves on to new endeavors.
Can we talk? There’s a question I’ve asked myself for 13 years and counting, especially with the Hawks becoming the latest Atlanta team to operate as a tease.
That question: Will anybody around here join the Braves as the only professional sports franchise with a world championship? I mean, will the Braves even do it again? And the 1968 Atlanta Chiefs don’t count. Well, unless you’re a little goofy and consider the famously wobbly North American Soccer League something worth mentioning.
I’m referring to whether the Hawks, the Falcons, the Thrashers or the Braves can spend a season within the next couple of millenniums keeping the events of October 28, 1995 at Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium from resembling a fluke.
That was the night of the second loudest baseball crowd I’ve heard inside these city limits. As for No.1, nothing will surpass the eternal stomping and screaming that occurred after Francisco Cabrera’s hit and Sid Bream’s slide. But back to No. 2, when David Justice’s homer gave the Braves their only run back then against the Cleveland Indians, and Mark Wohlers followed Tom Glavine’s eight innings of shutout pitching with a save. Then the Braves’ old ballpark became a noise factory again.
Soon after that World Series victory was official for the Braves, I roamed center field, about where Marquis Grissom squeezed the final out. I hadn’t a choice. Players, team officials, coaches. Nobody wanted to leave the area in order to savor the moment, so you had to interview folks on the field.
While those associated with the Braves alternated between smiling, crying and dancing (you know, with a few interviews in between), the crowd hollered louder and louder as they kept blaring Bachman-Turner Overdrive’s “Takin’ care of business” over the PA system.
I remember thinking from an Atlanta standpoint: It can’t get better than this, and it hasn’t. And it won’t. Not until one of these teams becomes more than just good, which is the Hawks’ problem in the playoffs against the Miami Heat.
Elite NBA teams have an elite player, such as the Heat’s Dwyane Wade, and Joe Johnson is the Hawks’ best player, but he’s only good, just like the Hawks.
The Falcons also are only good. Still, with suddenly enlightenment management and coaching, they have a chance for a breakthrough, but they need back-to-back winning seasons first. They’ve yet to do that in their existence.
Elsewhere, courtesy of decent starting pitching, promising youth and future Hall of Famers Chipper Jones at third base and Bobby Cox in the dugout, the Braves are only good (see a pattern here?). The Thrashers, not so much. Ilya Kovalchuk is the only overwhelming star on a flawed roster, and he could bolt after next season as an unrestricted free agent.
This isn’t to say the two major colleges around Atlanta have fared better at winning it all beyond gymnastics since pro teams came to Georgia in the mid-1960s. In football, the Bulldogs had a national championship in 1980, and the Yellow Jackets managed one 10 years later. Neither has come close since then.
But that’s another column.
111 comments Add your comment
Ernest
April 27th, 2009
4:28 pm
Best wishes going forward, Terence! I recall a piece you did a few years ago called, kids don’t drive. It was about the efforts parents make to get their children to practices, sometimes showing up late. I often repeat that line to coaches that want to punish kids for their parents getting them to practice late. I once offered to do the laps for my child for getting him to practice late before (delayed due to an accident).
You have written a LOT of columns that I have agreed and disagreed with. They also made me think, which I understand was your objective. Hope you new gig with AOL works out well.
PMC
April 27th, 2009
4:24 pm
Good Luck Terrance in whatever you decide to do.
David Justice
April 27th, 2009
4:22 pm
Hey Terry my buddy, thanks for the memories and working me into 91% of your articles since 1995. Regardless of the topic, from ND football’s return to glory to the Atlanta Spirit’s ownership of the Hawks you always find a way to work me into the article and for that I will always love you, just like Michael Bolton sang. I will miss you dearly but may have to subscribe to AOL instead now.
Thanks Terry from your man-crusher Dave!
LizDawg
April 27th, 2009
4:18 pm
Good riddance Terence and your incessant spewing of blatant racism. Free at last, praise God almighty we’re free at last!
AndyC
April 27th, 2009
4:16 pm
Terrence, I often disagreed with you but I do respect you as a journalist with strong opinions. Good luck to you. By the way, the Jackets national championship was a co-championship. Not a true championship.
Josh
April 27th, 2009
4:11 pm
I’m so glad you are finally gone, worst writer in sports…24 stellar years? are you F…ing serious?
Run Heap Run
April 27th, 2009
4:07 pm
Good luck Terrence. You definitely made people think.
Herschel Talker
April 27th, 2009
4:04 pm
Terence is gone! That is beautiful!
Barbarosa
April 27th, 2009
3:51 pm
“But that’s another column.”
Uh, not. Thanks for a mostly forgettable (stellar, did you write that yourself?) 24 years of mediocrity. Don’t let the screen door hit ya …
ProfFish
April 27th, 2009
3:49 pm
Good luck in the future, Terrence. I’ve enjoyed your work. You have made me think more than once. Sports is just part of life, not the reason for life.