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2003nlcsgame6.jpg
CURSE OF THE GOAT...PROOF THAT IT WASN'T BARTMAN'S FAULT

This website is a work in progress and will eventually include many of my other Chicago photographs. Below is the history behind the significance of this photograph. Feel free to scroll to the bottom of the page to order.

As many of you know, the hapless Chicago Cubs baseball team has not won a World Series since 1908, nor have they been to one since 1945. Any true Cubs fan will tell you that there is only one real explanation for this, yes, the curse of the goat.

The curse of the goat revolves around a longtime Cubs fan named William Sianis, a Greek bar owner (his bar was named the Billy Goat Bar) who lived a few blocks from the park. Throughout the late 1930s and early 1940s, he became a regular at Wrigley Field, mostly noticeable because he brought with him to every game his pet billy goat. Now, the Chicago Cubs made the World Series in 1945, and President Harry Truman was there at Wrigley for Game 1. Trying to paint a nice picture on the city and the team, Phil Wrigley, the original owner of the Cubs refused to allow Sianis to bring his pet goat into Wrigley Field for the first game of the Series. As he was escorted from the park, Sianis turned around, raised his hand, and put a hex on the Cubs.

Now what exactly the curse was about is a bit murky. He either cursed the team to lose the Series, to lose as long as Phil Wrigley lived, or to lose as long as they played in Wrigley Field. Most fans today believe that it was the third curse, which has caused the team to not return to the World Series in fifty six years.

As amazing as it might seem, many people believe it is true. People have actually performed ritual exorcisms to try and rid Wrigley Field and the Cubs of the curse of the goat. Many, many more fans take it as something of a sarcastic commentary on the continued sorry state of the team and their seeming inability to have any good luck since 1945.

Here is a brief summary of the woes the Chicago Cubs have had since 1945.

The Chicago Cubs have not returned to the World Series since 1945, a dry spell of 56 years, the longest dry spell by far of any major league baseball team.

In 1950, after five straight losing years, the Cubs brought a goat onto the field at Wrigley Field, walked him backwards around the bases, and had the goat urinate on home plate. The goat got a urinary tract infection and died less than a month later.

In 1962, the team had one of the greatest prospects the game has ever seen, second baseman Ken Hubbs. He had one of the best rookie years ever played at second base and the team hoped to build a young nucleus around him throughout the 1960s. Hubbs was confindent enough in the future of the team that after the season, he publicly stated that the curse had been broken. He died in a plane crash after his rookie season.

In 1965, the Cubs traded their young infielder, Lou Brock, to the St. Louis Cardinals for veteran pitcher Ernie Broglio. Broglio went on to win one more game in the majors. Lou Brock is now in the Hall of Fame.

In 1969, the Cubs held a seemingly insurmountable lead in their division, but went on one of the worst two week stretches of baseball ever played to close the season, losing the title to the New York Mets. It is one of the biggest chokes of all time.

In 1984, the Cubs were one pitch away from the World Series with a team that many thought was nearly unstoppable. They proceeded to gaffe that game and then lose the next two to get bounced from the playoffs.

In 1987, the Cubs outright released reliever Dennis Eckersley, believing him to be all washed up. He went on to be one of the best closers of all time with the Oakland Athletics, helping them to the 1988, 1989, AND 1990 World Series as their closer.

In 1989 and 1998, the Cubs made the playoffs and were eliminated in the first round of competition.

In 2003Steven Bartman (born 1977) is a Chicago resident and alumnus of the University of Notre Dame who gained notoriety on the evening of October 14, 2003 for allegedly interfering with a foul pop-up in Game 6 of the NLCS baseball playoffs between the Chicago Cubs and the Florida Marlins at Wrigley Field.

Bartman, a lifelong Cubs fan, was sitting in a box seat in the front row along the left field corner wall behind the bullpen, when a pop foul fly off the bat of Luis Castillo drifted toward his seat with one out and runner on base in the eighth inning. Cubs left fielder Moises Alou was in position to attempt a catch, but Bartman, who was watching the ball and not the fielder, blocked the ball from Alou's glove. Alou slammed his glove down in frustration, and the Cubs argued for an interference call. Video replays showed that, although Alou would have had an opportunity to make the catch if Bartman had not reached for the ball, the ball was clearly in the seating area, thus fan interference could not be called.

Following this incident, the Marlins scored eight unanswered runs. Bartman had to be led away from the park under escort for his own safety. Many Cub fans blamed Bartman for the Cubs losing this game and, ultimately, their chance at reaching the World Series for the first time since 1945.

Is the curse of a Greek barkeep angry at the Chicago Cubs for not allowing his goat in the park the reason? You decide!

MOST OF THE ADVERTISING FOR THIS UNIQUE PHOTOGRAPH HAS BEEN BY "WORD OF MOUTH" SO HOPEFULLY YOU'VE ALREADY SEEN OR HEARD ABOUT THIS PICTURE AND HOW IT REALLY LOOKS, UNFORTUNETLY THIS WEBSITE DOES NOT DO IT JUSTICE.

THIS PICUTRE WAS TAKEN FROM "THE CUBBY BEAR" AT THE CORNER OF CLARK AND ADDISON PRIOR TO GAME SIX OF THE 2003 NATIONAL LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES VS THE FLORIDA MARLINS. IT IS WHAT HAS BECOME TO BE KNOWN AS "THE BARTMAN GAME."

I NOTICED SILAS'S GRANDSON WITH "THE GOAT" BEING INTERVIED ACCROSS THE STREET AND THOUGHT IT WOULD MAKE A GREAT PICTURE WITH WRIGLEY FIELD IN THE BACKGROUND. I WAITED TO CAPTURE THE PAIR AS THEY CROSSED THE STREET IN FRONT OF THE MARQUIS WHEN IT READ "NLCS GAME 6 CUBS VS MARLINS." I WAS LUCKY ENOUGH NOT ONLY TO CAPTURE THEM WITH THE PERFECT BACKGROUND AND WITHOUT TOO MANY PEDESTRIANS AROUND. I TOOK THE PICTURE THINKING IT WOULD BE SIGNIFICANT BECAUSE IT WOULD BE THE YEAR WE FINALLY BROKE THE "BILLY GOAT CURSE."

THIS IS AN UNDOCTORED PHOTOGRAPH AND IS REPRINTED FROM THE NEGATIVE IN A MATTE FINISH SIZE 16X20. ENLARGING THE PHOTO WITH A MATTE FINISH GIVES IT A VINTAGE FEEL. EACH PHOTO IS HAND SIGNED AND NUMBERED. THERE WILL ONLY BE 100 OF THESE HAND SIGNED PHOTO'S MADE.

MAKES A GREAT GIFT FOR ANY CUBS FAN

ONLY $50PLUS S/H
 
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Each "Cursed" photograph is hand numbered and signed on a 16x20 matte finish photo reprint.