To Braves, Hawks, Falcons, Thrashers: Good is for losers

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.

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Najeh Davenpoop

April 28th, 2009
12:27 am

I wasn’t ever a huge fan of T. Moore, but he was a lot better than his haters gave him credit for, and he did make me think every once in a while. Although many AJC readers think any black person who mentions other black people is a racist, I can’t say I ever got that vibe from him. Good luck wherever you end up going.

And yeah, the ATL will see a championship sooner or later.

michaelgee

April 28th, 2009
12:19 am

fwiw, you didn’t make anybody think good things, you made the ATL look dumber with every negative biased article you wrote. You never represented any Atlanta Professional Franchise with anything but disdain.
Good luck on the Jim Rome circuit.

michaelgee

April 28th, 2009
12:15 am

BnB

April 28th, 2009
12:13 am

Good luck in the future. As for making us think….uh, rewriting the same 12 columns over 24 years was not always thought provoking. You made some good points though. Always easy for those of us in the Peanut Gallery to throw rotten fruit. It’s sort of like being in the Press Gallery!;)

JM

April 28th, 2009
12:12 am

Some of these hateful comments directed at Terence Moore are simply petulant. Terence, as far as I know, is a good man and an upstanding citizen. He’s done nothing to deserve the vitriol that has been thrown his way on this blog.

Jeez, people, are your lives so empty that you have to attack this man’s character because he said some less-than-flattering things about your favorite teams over the years? I’m sure Moore has written some articles that have gotten my blood boiling, but at the end of the day, this is just sports we’re talking about. I’m as big of a diehard of my teams as anyone else, but it’s not really worth getting riled up over and it’s certainly not worth holding a personal grudge against someone just because he didn’t kiss your team’s butt all the time. To attack Moore the way some of you have (not just today, but for many years) is just plain silly.

I wish Terence all the best in the future.

Reg3870

April 28th, 2009
12:09 am

What a loser? You should have moved 24 years ago.

Always Disagreed

April 28th, 2009
12:03 am

Nobody can take away that it took some serious balls to write some of the stuff you did. But you never took cheap shots, unlike some writers who would spit flame at college and high school KIDS, you always took it to the MEN of these games and let us watch the fireworks.

I almost always found myself arguing out loud with most of your points, which is probably the same for many of these people, and also why we kept reading. You and everyone else made mistakes, we just more often than not were chomping at the bit to tear you down for yours.

You are obviously doing something right, you still have a job. I can safely say I will not miss your opinions about the HOMETOWN teams, but without you where would we get most of our passion for these teams from? It seems to be hiding until someone says something bad, and oftentimes that was you.

I think without some of the bias we all perceive and some of the missed or misapplied facts, you would have been more widely accepted here.

Good luck, dude.