0 Members and 26 Guests are viewing this topic.
In the end, this really isn’t a sports story, or at least it’s not a story about sports themselves. It’s a story about what sports does to us. It’s a story about how sports can bring us to a higher place, about why we cling to fandom no matter how bad our team is playing or how far away they are. The reason we’ve all stayed Royals fans through a generation of sadness and failure is because the joy we took from being Royals fans wasn’t derived solely from their success on the field. It was from the joy of being part of something bigger than ourselves. It was from the joy that comes from connecting with others. Being linked together by sadness and failure is far better than not being linked at all.
guys i dont hate sung woo. i just think hes kind of a dork for staying up in the middle of the night to watch royals baseball. also for using his like one vacation this decade to come solely to kansas city. hes a dork... im not going to boo him but id give him about a 5% chance of throwing a strike. just said i was gonna boo him because mattsungwooslefthand wants to bone him.
Quote from: The Tonya Harding of Twitter Users Creep on August 11, 2014, 09:05:58 AMguys i dont hate sung woo. i just think hes kind of a dork for staying up in the middle of the night to watch royals baseball. also for using his like one vacation this decade to come solely to kansas city. hes a dork... im not going to boo him but id give him about a 5% chance of throwing a strike. just said i was gonna boo him because mattsungwooslefthand wants to bone him.Sounds like you're the dork
Wacky, be sure not to trip when you backpedal that quickly.
wacky hates sung woo? eff.looks like i just joined #TeamSungWoo
If it were up to me, Wintz would be on a fan scholarship, full ride.