The Great Eastern Earthquake of 2011.
May we have a moment of silence, please.
I can speak from personal experience as to the life-changing
experience. It was in a moment of frustration,
as a result of stepping in for our vacationing Disaster Response guy during a
time period that contained an earthquake AND an approaching hurricane, that I
undid three months of physical therapy on my shoulder by hurling a fistful of
napkins at my cube wall. Afterwards, I
was only too happy to turn Disaster Response back to the proper department.
Now here we are one year later, and there is still
earthshaking news rattling around the Baltimore area. It seems that an Eastern Shore bar has forsaken both the
Baltimore Ravens and the Washington Redskins, and become an official Steelers
bar.
I heard about it on the radio, as the morning show jocks
(and other listeners) started complaining about it. Here’s the situation:
Let me start with what the Eastern Shore is… The Eastern
Shore is that little slice of Maryland on the eastern shore of the Chesapeake
Bay, across from the mainland. It’s a
haven for crabbers and watermen in the central area, and is a primo vacation
spot towards the south, where there is exposure to both the bay and the
Atlantic Ocean. (This is where Ocean
City is.)
Anyway, a Chesapeake Bay dockside bar called the Red Eye Dock Bar
has been trying to draw people to watch pro football there, but to no
avail. As you can see from the map,
their location is equidistant between Baltimore and Washington, so you’d think
that there would be plenty of fans of both teams to keep the place afloat on
Sundays.
While they do a bustling business during the summer, the
Eastern Shore is only really hopping during the summer. During the fall and winter, it’s just the
locals that are out and about. So while
they tried to drum up Sunday business to support the home teams, the locals
just weren’t biting, preferring to stay home and watch the games on TV for
free. In order to keep doing Sunday
business, something would have to change.
Into that void stepped a local Steelers Fan Club. Apparently they had recently lost their home
base bar and were in the market for another.
They approached the bar owner and proposed that in exchange for making
Red Eye’s a Steelers bar, they would pack the place every Sunday during
football season.
It was really a no-brainer.
A business needs real customers with real dollars to spend. They can’t pay the bills with home town
spirit, so the owner accepted the deal, thus igniting the subsequent shit
storm.
This morning as I lay in bed listening to the radio, I was
severely tempted to call in and try to talk some sense into the morning show
jocks, (but I didn’t want to spend 20 minutes on hold). Instead of complaining about the
“traitorous” bar, they should complain about the people that didn’t show
up! You can’t blame the bar for trying
to drum up business. Say what you will
about Steeler fans, but their money is as green as anyone else’s. You want to lay blame, lay it on the Ratbird
and ‘Skins fans. Of course, the station
is not going to blame their listeners when there is another scapegoat
available. But that doesn’t make it
right.
I will acknowledge, though, that one of the jocks made the
above point, and tried to talk the other ones down off the ledge. But I just had to laugh... Steeler fans strike again! There’s nothing like causing discord in enemy territory.
Red Eye’s is not the first Steeler bar in the area; there
are actually several. Back when I first
moved here, my brother and I used to go to one on the south end of town. There were a couple of problems with this
place, which kept me from going back.
First, the owners and customers seemed to spend an
inordinate amount of time living in the 70s.
I mean, I appreciate Terry and Franco and Lambert and Swann as much as
the next guy, but I prefer to dwell on our current team. The 70s-era Pittsburgh Steelers Polka should
remain there. I’m more interested in
the newer fight songs.
But the biggest problem to me was that if you weren’t there
by 10:00 for a 1:00 game, you couldn’t get a seat. Trust me; it’s no fun standing at a bar for four hours, watching
a game. And I was still in my (late)
30s then… I won’t stand for 10 minutes, now.
Most of the time, I don’t need to go to a sports bar at all
to see a Steelers game in Baltimore.
Usually there are at least 10 out of 16 games that will be on regular
TV, between the national games, the 2 against the Ratbirds, and any other game
where the Steelers aren’t on directly opposite Baltimore. This year, for example, I expect that all
but 4 games will be on TV. I work it
out as soon as the schedule comes out in May.
As you may have seen in prior posts, I have a regular sports
bar, Jilly’s, that I frequent when the Steelers aren’t on TV. Technically it’s a “Ravens Roost,” but they
have all the games on, and fans of all teams come in to watch. It’s kind of a fun, multi-cultural
event. Sometimes I go even if the
Steelers ARE on TV, just because I always have a good time.
While watching a game among a large, like-minded group has
its benefits, (fewer fights), there’s also something to be said for a little
friendly smack talk. In the 7or 8 years
I’ve been going there, I’ve never seen a fight or even a serious quarrel.
OK, I’ve had to out-smack talk a couple of local goobers once
in a while, but that hasn’t been much of a challenge. The ones that talk a lot of crap aren’t usually that bright. And if they have a point, I’ll agree with
them. If my guys screw up, I’ll be the
first to admit it. And the bar owner
and bartenders love me. I’m always
polite, I eat, I drink and I tip well.
They also know I’m not out looking to cause (much…) trouble.
That’s another thing about the old place we used to go. The bar across the street became a “Ravens
Roost” and the next thing you know, there were bottles flying back and forth
after the games. I’m sorry, I want to
root for my team, not become an extra in the Mid-Atlantic version of
“Roadhouse.”
“Sorry Ray-Ray, no felons allowed in.”
Anyway, I wish Red Eye’s Dock Bar all the best. And I hope the Eastern Shore chapter of the
Pittsburgh Steelers Fan Club showers the place with cash. If the bar owner does his part… like bring
in some IC Light and Rolling Rock, put some pierogi and giant sandwiches with
fries and slaw on the menu, and put some “Six-Time Super Bowl Champion” signs
on the wall, and I’m sure it will all work out fine.
Just be sure to retire the Steelers Polka.
10 comments:
Sports never cease to amaze me. I'm always happy to have hometown pride and such, but IT'S A SPORT!
And it's not the NHL.
What?
It might have to do for the time being... I'm not optimistic that the NHL will be able to avoid another lockout.
I still have flashbacks to that horrid moment last year... I almost spilled my beer.
Off to therapy!!
Hugs!
Valerie
My Polish roommate eats ketchup on his pierogies. Just sayin'.
I really hope the "fistful of napkins" bit is true.
I joined a support group, because last year, it rocked my world.
Oh, it’s totally true. You must have missed the post I did all about it. I should have linked it up, but you can see it here… http://darwinfish2.blogspot.com/2011/09/bad-day.html… Bluz’ Awful No Good Very Bad Day.
Road trip!
Yinz just say “when” and I’ll roll out the Blue Carpet.
That first picture cracks me up every. single. time.
I still have it tacked up on the outside of my cube at work. Still kills me. I just wish I was the one that thought it up.
Post a Comment