In fiction Examples of lovable losers in media include
Charlie Brown, the main character of the
Peanuts comic strip by
Charles M. Schulz, whose exploits in futility include an inability to fly a kite without getting it stuck in a tree, never receiving
valentines from anyone in his school class, being the pitcher on a winless baseball team, and repeatedly being convinced by
Lucy to try to kick a football, only for her to yank it away at the last second;
Chandler Bing on
Friends, who for most of the show's run was unable to find romance (in contrast with his roommate,
Joey Tribbiani, who easily fell into meaningless relationships); It has been argued that "the lovable loser plays a big part in the American dream", because "the lovable loser--as long as he is on the side of the angels--rescues the country from its excesses, and thus represents an indispensable national trait".
In real life In sports, the phrase specifically refers to athletes or sports teams that, despite their best efforts, are consistently unable to win. The term was particularly applied to the
Chicago Cubs baseball team for a long stretch of their existence, during which a World Series championship eluded the team from
1908 until
2016. A 1961 college football game preview predicting a loss for
Indiana University described the team's head coach,
Phil Dickens as a "big lovable loser". Golfer
Sam Snead, who had close losses in a number of golf tournaments, was characterized as a lovable loser in 1963, although he was a winner of three of the four major golf tournaments, which included three PGA Championships. A 1963
Chicago Tribune headline named the
New York Mets lovable losers. The Mets went on to win the World Series six years later. In cycling, French rider
Raymond Poulidor has been described as a lovable loser: he earned the nickname "the eternal second" as he never won the
Tour de France or wore the
yellow jersey, despite scoring three runner-up finishes and five third places, and was eclipsed by his rival and compatriot
Jacques Anquetil. Nevertheless, he achieved great popularity with the French public. ==References==