A number of curses are used to explain the failures or misfortunes of specific sports teams, players, or even cities. For example: • No first-time winner of the
World Snooker Championship has successfully defended his title since the event was first held at the
Crucible Theatre in
Sheffield in
1977. This has been widely attributed to a
Crucible Curse. • The
Curse of the Billy Goat was used to explain the failures of the
Chicago Cubs baseball team, who did not win a World Series championship between 1908 and 2016, and a National League pennant between 1945 and 2016. • The
Curse of the Bambino is a cliche popularized by a Boston Globe sportswriter to describe a decades-long championship drought for the
Boston Red Sox team in Major League Baseball. "Bambino" was a nickname for
Babe Ruth, the team's star when Boston won the last three of its first five World Series titles. In 1920, Red Sox owner
Harry Frazee sold Ruth to his team's archrival
New York Yankees, which won four World Series with him. It took Boston 86 years to win another World Series. The Red Sox reversed history in the 2004
American League Championship Series (ALCS), losing the first three games of a best-of-seven series against the Yankees before winning four in a row to take the league pennant in unprecedented and dramatic style. This comeback is considered one of the greatest in sports history. The Red Sox then swept the
St. Louis Cardinals in the
2004 World Series in four games, a triumph which many fans considered the end of the "curse." The Red Sox have won three more World Series since then. • The Krukow Kurse was used to explain the
San Francisco Giants' failure to ever win the
World Series until 2010. It is attributed to
Mike Krukow (a former
pitcher for the Giants and a current
broadcaster for the team) based upon his yearly
pre-season predictions that the Giants "have a chance" to win the World Series. Once Krukow stops making such predictions—says the
legend—the Giants will, in fact, win the World Series. However, the Giants went on to win the World Series in 2010. It was during the same year that Krukow's partner, Giants broadcaster, Duane Kuiper, stated, "Giants baseball, it's torture!", due to the large number of close games that they played. This phrase was adopted by fans and became a rallying cry throughout the second half of the season and the playoff run. • The
Curse of the Colonel was supposedly cast on the
Hanshin Tigers by Colonel
Harland Sanders (the founder and mascot of
Kentucky Fried Chicken) after fans of the team threw his statue into the
Dōtonbori Canal while celebrating the Tigers' 1985
Japan Championship Series, not to be recovered until 2009. The curse was broken in 2023 when the Tigers won Game 7 of the
2023 Japan Series for their first NPB championship since 1985. • Marketing experts have highlighted the curse of
Gillette, given the mishaps that happen to sports stars associated with the brand. ==See also==