A Heartbroken Braves Fan

It’s safe to say that I will never experience a game with ranging emotions like the 2012 Wild Card game between the Cardinals and the Braves. I was so excited and ready to exorcise the demons from the Braves collapse from 2011. I was so excited to watch Chipper Jones playing another game at Turner Field. I was so excited to see a sold out ballpark chopping and chanting to my hearts delight. Instead, I ended up heartbroken.

Heartbroken that the Braves couldn’t get past the Cardinals again.

Heartbroken that the Braves record winning streak when Kris Medlen starts came to an end at twenty-three.

Heartbroken that the team that prided itself on defense (with the fewest errors in the National League) ended up committing three crucial throwing errors.

Heartbroken every time the Braves put runners on base and couldn’t get them home, twelve in all.

Heartbroken when the excitement from the Andrelton Simmons bunt got reversed to an out, but it was the right call.

Heartbroken that an infield fly call gone wrong is what we’ll remember this game for.

Heartbroken that Braves fans did the wrong thing in protesting the call by throwing debris on to the field and making us all look bad.

Heartbroken that it might actually be the right call, but called wrong.

Heartbroken that the Braves still had a chance with the bases loaded in the 8th and Michael Bourn just couldn’t come through.

Heartbroken that if the playoff system wasn’t in place, they would still be playing a game two in the NLDS.

Heartbroken that a 94-win season came down to one game where anything could happen (and did) and not a three-game series.

Heartbroken that the Braves have now lost four straight winner-take-all games at Turner Field.

Heartbroken that the Cardinals were chanting “Infield fly” in the clubhouse, after the game.

Heartbroken that the protest I believed might work, but deep down knew wouldn’t. Didn’t actually come to fruition to save the Braves.

Most of all, I’m heartbroken that I’ll never see my favorite player of all-time, Chipper Jones, play the game we both love so much.

Thank you for everything Chipper. Thank you for being a role model, the 1999 NL MVP, a World Series champion, an All-Star, and even the greatest tweeter of all-time, while doing it all with a smile on your face. You’ve made Braves Country so proud these past 19 seasons. Thank you for never leaving. Thank you for never quitting not from a torn ACL in 2010 and especially not from making the last out in your final game. I look forward to making the trip to Cooperstown in five years to see you be enshrined in the Baseball Hall of Fame. #10 is forever in my heart. You deserved better than going out in a game like this.

Now to just put my heart back together again for April 1st against the Phillies. This is why we chop, Braves fans. Nothing can ever keep us down.

-Bryan Mapes (@IAmMapes)

3 comments

  1. Jeff

    In all fairness, the Cardinals weren’t chanting “Infield Fly”, They were chanting “Happy Flight”, their rally cry from last year started by Rafael Furcal, whenever they won a rubber/eliminiation game before a flight home or away.

    From mlb.com:
    “It was the jovial Furcal who coined the phrase “happy flight,” as a way for the Cardinals to commemorate victories on getaway days. Including Sunday’s 12-6 victory in Game 6 of the NLCS, the Cardinals have boarded 17 straight flights having won their most recent game.”

  2. This is a very simple game...

    I think that after the controversy dies down, this Wild Card game will be remembered more for being Chipper Jones’ last game as opposed to the Infield/Outfield Fly Rule call and a big part of the reason why is the grace with which he handled the postgame interviews – a telling cap to a stellar career as both a player and a teammate.
    — Kristen

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