During the
final weekend of this March, nearly 90,000 rabid Montreal baseball fans filled
the cavernous Olympic Stadium to watch a two-game pre-season series between the
Toronto Blue Jays and the New York Mets. And somehow, in spirit, the Montreal
Expos returned to their East End home, albeit for a brief return visit.
Yet, you
couldn’t miss the unforgettable sight of the majority of those in attendance
sporting the variations of the familiar red/white/blue tri-colour makeup of the
Expos on-field uniform, with that distinctive “MB” meld of a team logo. It’s
been 20 years since the 1994 edition of the Expos fielded one of the best teams
in the franchise’s history – only to have their division, league and World
Series championship ambitions dashed by a players’ strike; and it’s been 10
years since the Expos played their swan song season in Montreal before they
pulled up stakes and headed due south to become the Washington Nationals.
And for
many of those fans who made the pilgrimage to the Big O last month, the wounds
of 1994 and 2004 haven’t healed yet. And on top of that, they keep asking
themselves why Major League Baseball placed such a cruel fate on the Expos, and
what did the team do to deserve such a fate? Well, I think their questions will
be adequately answered after they read Jonah Keri’s book Up, Up and Away!
This is a
book that has been a long time coming, and is a story that needed to be told. Keri,
a veteran sports journalist and author, who was a native Montrealer and himself
a rabid Expos fan, gives the inside story of the Montreal Expos’ 35-year
rollercoaster existence as a National League franchise.
Yet when
you start reading the book, the impression you get was that the Expos was a
team that was bitten and cursed before they even took the field for their
inaugural season in 1969. Mayor Jean Drapeau, councillor Gerry Synder and owner
Charles Bronfman promised Major League Baseball and the National League that if
Montreal was granted a franchise, the team would have a domed stadium of their
own by 1972. However, before that became a “reality”, they had trouble finding
the team a temporary home; Delorimier Downs (the home of the much revered Montreal
Royals) was too small, and the Autostade near the Expo 67 site was too
expensive to convert into a baseball stadium, which is why they settled on tiny
Jarry Park, in which the all too short expansion plans were delayed by a
massive snowstorm, and almost wasn’t ready for opening day. As well, the
players they chose during their expansion draft were either too young or too
old for the majors, and some players – like veteran Maury Wills – were quite
vocal about their aversion to playing for this upstart team in Montreal.
Keri
outlines the many reasons why the Expos were such a beloved, yet cursed, team. One
reason that really stands out was the team’s inability to hold onto a good
player for an extended period of time. Because of continuous financial difficulties,
and the reluctance of a string of owners (especially Claude Brochu, who is
painted as the villain of this saga) to let loose their purse strings and
invest in trading and drafting talented players, it was almost like the team
had no choice but to cut loose their best players for either money or players
who were mostly mediocre at best. Gary Carter, Andre Dawson, Jeff Reardon, John
Wettleland, Marquis Grissom, Larry Walker, Vladimir Guerrero … the list of
talented players the Expos lost to other teams where they excelled even further
just goes on.
As well,
Keri occasionally involves himself in his narrative of the Expos story, as he
parallels the team’s burst of success in 1979, 1981 and 1994 with his personal
devotion to the team, which was exemplified with “The Maple Ridge Boys”, a
group that included him and his friends, in which they fanatically followed the
team at home and even on the road, which is a vivid example of a sports fan’s
devotion to the home team. He even chronicles his painful disillusion after
Baseball Commissioner Bud Selig cancelled the 1994 season during the players’
strike; however, that sense of disillusionment melted away when his girlfriend
and future wife bought him a 1959 Felipe Alou rookie card for his birthday.
Besides the
terrific research and countless interviews he conducted with former players,
broadcasters and front office personnel, Keri offers several sidebar pieces
that give some new perspectives on different aspects of the Expos story, such
as a brutally honest analysis of the team’s 1969 opening day line up; the story
behind the “MB” logo; the appeal of Pascual Perez; the case of why Tim Raines
should be a Hall of Famer; and why Vladimir Guerrero was the last Expos
superstar.
So whether
you were a fan of “Le Grand Orange” or “El Presidente”, remember the painful
legacy of “Blue Monday”, was harassed by Souki, the Expos’ pre-Youppi mascot;
attended the 1982 All-Star Game, or was a proud resident of “Jonesville”, Up, Up and Away! is a book that you must
read, so that you can get the full story of the bittersweet history of the team
that we affectionately called “Nos Amours”, and realize how much we really miss
them.
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