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Guard Mo Cheeks celebrating the Sixers victory over the Lakers in 1983. Now he´s the Sixers coach - and the Inquirer has long been printing color photographs.
Guard Mo Cheeks celebrating the Sixers victory over the Lakers in 1983. Now he's the Sixers coach - and the Inquirer has long been printing color photographs.
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Map: How many titles have cities won since '83?
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Loserville: 25 years, 0 titles

Now that the Flyers have been eliminated from the Stanley Cup playoffs, it's official, sports fans:

Philadelphia has gone 25 years without winnning a championship in any of its four major sports.

Our last hurrah was in 1983, when Julius Erving, Moses Malone and Mo Cheeks led the Sixers to a sweep over the NBA's Los Angeles Lakers.

Ed Rendell was district attorney, the Commodore 64 was a popular computer, and McNuggets were just a gleam of spattered grease in execs' eyes at McDonald's.

No other four-sports city in North America can claim such a run of disappointment.

Or ever could.

The second-longest streak since the NBA began was Chicago's 22-year drought between National Football League titles by the '63 and '85 Bears.

We're No. 1 - at falling short!

Even more deflating is how many cities have had multiple parades since 1983.

Pittsburgh has won three titles - and the Penguins, having ousted the Flyers, are in the Stanley Cup finals.

Denver, Dallas, San Antonio and San Francisco have won four titles. Each. Edmonton has won five hockey crowns, three in the Canadian Football League. Boston has 7 titles - and could soon add an eighth if the Celtics prevail in the NBA. Detroit has 7, too - with both the Red Wings and Pistons still in the playoff hunt. Los Angeles has 8 - 10 if you count nearby Anaheim's two - and the Lakers are still alive in NBA. New York has 9 - also 10 if you count hockey's Islanders, who won in '83.

Even East Rutherford, N.J., has kicked our keisters, with three titles by hockey's New Jersey Devils - and three more, if you want to rub salt into the wounds, by football's New York Giants.

Yes, all since the Sixers won in 1983.

That's long enough for an American to have had three "average" marriages.

Or to be born and earn a master's degree - or do a few tours in Iraq.

Of course, you could object to restricting the self-pity party to cities with all four sports.

What if, other cities were included, and instead of years, the count was done by seasons? Then who's the biggest loser?

No question, it's Cleveland - which had its heart broken again just yesterday, when the Cavaliers failed in the final minutes of the seventh game against the Celtics.

Philadelphia's streak has lasted for 98 seasons, if you don't count two championship chances lost to strikes - 1994 in baseball, and 2005 in hockey.

Cleveland has gone 124 seasons without a victory bash. Its last moment of trophy glory was in December 1964 - more than 43 years ago - when the Browns took the NFL championship. A couple of seasons before there was a Super Bowl.

San Diego and Buffalo haven't won anything since American Football League titles back in the '60s, and the 1979 Supersonics won Seattle its last title, but their season streaks still fall short of Philly's.

One could say those cities have even more cause to whine. After all, they haven't just lacked champions - they've lacked teams.

Far worse to be Butte, Des Moines or Las Vegas.

It's better to have played and lost than never to have played at all.


Contact staff writer Peter Mucha at 215-854-4342 or pmucha@phillynews.com.

 

Comments
Posted by Shabba Rommel 01:50 PM, 05/19/2008
Philly is a great town for owners of sports teams. all you need to do is build a fancy new stadium and field a mediocre team and the fans will come in droves. The Linc (50K waiting list for season tix), no championships, the Bank (10K waiting list for season tix), no championships, Flyers and Sixers are in rebuilding years BECAUSE THE STINK AND COULDNT SELL OUT A VENUE. The laws of economics are simple, why should ownership pay extra money to build a championship team if the fans are going to sell out stadiums anyway????
Posted by frankg962 01:58 PM, 05/19/2008
We in Philly need only look at Cleveland or Buffalo and consider ourselves lucky. In my lifetime I saw the Sixers, Flyers and even the Phillies win titles. I fault team ownership for not wanting to spend the money it takes to win but let's remember we could live in someplace like the aforementioned towns and be really unfortunate.
Posted by vinni 03:29 PM, 05/19/2008
Why does everyone always fault ownership for being cheap? it does not take money to get a championship, it takes intelligence. Yankees - very rich, spend a ton of money, and have 0 banners since they started going crazy on free agents. Trading barkley, schilling and rolen for the equivalence of warm beer; drafting Shawn Bradley or Mike Mamula or signing lance parrish or danny tartabull or forgetting that pitching wins and then building a ballpark that is about as opposed to pitching as possible....sigh. these are simply bad decisions, money isn't part of it.
Posted by 4everphillyfanlou 04:08 PM, 05/19/2008
Philadelphia teams are good every year to win a championship. Since 1983 all of the 4 sports have come so freaking close!!! I think the Soul will have the last laugh this year. I wouldn't say loserville, all 4 teams are very good right now which is bizarre. It's tough being a Philly fan but we do have championships in every major sport. The 25 year wait right now is tough but once one team comes through with a championship in the near future this city will rock for months. If I had to do it over I would still be a Philly fan!!! Dallasucks...
Posted by Xi Jah 04:09 PM, 05/19/2008
Luck has a lot to do with...It always seems that when we've been in position to win we get hit by the unlucky injury, the hot team, a bad call (I was at the Burt Hooten game...for real). What mostly typifies our luck is Brad Daugherty...our turn for the number one pick comes up and is Magic Johnson waiting? Larry Bird? LeBron?...That's bad luck.
Posted by gaphillyfan 06:14 PM, 05/19/2008
I would just like to see any of the four major teams play and work together as a team. The Flyers go so far every year, and I hear we need another player, goalie, or whoever. I hear the same thing about needing players for the Eagles, Phillies, and Sixers. It really does not matter how much money you spend or who the owner is. If the players do not have an attitude of working together, desiring to give a consistent effort in every game, and pulling together when someone gets injured to still play at the same level, all of these teams are going to fall short. In every team, I have seen brief and fleeting moments of passion, and we all know when they are going to give up year in and year out. I still follow and support them all. I remember when teams who are not considered major professional teams like the Philadelphia Stars with a USFL title, Philadelphia Wings with 6 World Lacrosse Championships, Philadelphia Barrage with 2 Major Lacrosse League Back to Back Championships, Philadelphia Kixx with 2 MISL Championships, and Philadelphia Phantoms with 2 Calder Cups have all won in my former hometown. I would like to see these major teams leave their hearts out on the field, ice, diamond, and court with every player on their team.
Posted by jojorich2 02:51 PM, 05/20/2008
Since 1983 Philly has literally sucked in fielding a team of all-star caliber. The 83 Sixers sent Doc, Moses, Mo Cheeks, Toney and Bobby Jones to the all-star game. Which was the last time any Philly team could claim to have that many all-stars in an all-star game. We can't pick talent. We prefer to have one all-star caliber player surrounded by a bunch of bums. No elite team in the NFL would have placed that cast around Donovan McNabb. Look who played with Barkley and Iverson, none of their supporting cast were all-star caliber. Ironically, it seems that when they get traded they always seem to get better or realize their potential. Can anyone say Derrick Burgess?? The Sixers picked John Salmons over Tayshaun Prince in the draft? Our front offices in every sport suck. We want to win on the cheap and even if we are shelling out doe we can't ever seem to get a player to realize his true potential at least not while he is in Philly. Karma and negative energy does have its place somewhere in the sports universe and Philly holds the title on illogical picks and negativity.
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