Part One can be read here.

Soon, a sense of entitlement seemed to follow Boston Red Sox Nation around, at least that’s how I viewed it.

Whether it was constant (over)exposure, their newfound status as the team to beat, or both, or neither, I quickly began to dislike the team—namely Kevin Youkilis, who whined and argued at practically every strike called against him, the “new-school” GM Theo Epstein, who seemed as knowledgeable about the actual game of baseball as Archie Bunker was about subtlety, and eventually Jon Papelbon and his gimmicky glaring.

It got to the point where I could only speak of the Red Sox pejoratively. They received extensive SportsCenter focus while my Giants (save for the atrocious Bonds On Bonds) and most all other clubs fought for the scraps. Boston won another title in 2007, and I felt sick—because I knew more of the same was in store.

Fast-forward to 2011.

Boston seemed destined for yet another postseason run headed into September, up nine games on Tampa Bay for the AL East Wild Card. By the last day of the season, as we all know, they’d frittered it all away and were tied with Tampa. Down big against a Yankee team with zero to play for, the Rays came all the way back and won in walk-off fashion, meaning the Red Sox had to beat lowly Baltimore just to secure a one-game playoff.

They led 3-2 in the bottom of the ninth.

They lost 4-3.

You would have thought my Giants had won the World Series again—never in my life had I been so elated to see a team lose. Not even those 2010 RangersThat was how much I’d grown to detest the team, the organization, the fan base, the reverence of their 100-year-old shack of a ballpark, the media coverage, the ridiculous Yankee-esque spending they’d embraced—all of it.

In the wake of the historical collapse, sweeping changes hit the franchise and didn’t cede until August of 2012. Gone were Epstein, longtime horses Tim Wakefield and Jason Varitek (a combined 31 years with Boston), Papelbon, Youkilis, Josh Beckett and even the two superstars signed for a combined 15 years and $750 billion just the previous offseason, Adrian Gonzalez and Carl Crawford.

Only six members of the 2007 title team remain, and many high-profile acquisitions have failed. (Does anyone even remember that John Lackey is still under contract?) Under new field and general management the Red Sox are 63-75 as of Sept. 8, barely ahead of last-place Toronto.

While stopping short of feeling anything approaching sympathy, this franchise is such a train wreck that it’s just not possible to hate them right now.

I happened to be visiting my friend Jenn, a New England transplant and Red Sox fan who had no idea about the extent to which the team had deteriorated, when Boston was scheduled to play against Oakland, but never actually showed up—going down in a 20-2 ball of flames. Adding insult to injury—the defining blow was a grand slam off the bat of Josh Reddick, cast off to Oakland in the offseason for damaged-goods reliever Andrew Bailey.

Jenn sat in total disbelief at what she saw—Boston did little right, and what they did do right still backfired. Even when the 2004-11 teams were blown out, never did they look as unprepared, inferior and daunted as they did against Oakland.

I couldn’t take any pleasure in this loss, as would have been the case a year ago. (Plus, I didn’t want to be ejected from my friend’s home.)

David Ortiz and Dustin Pedroia, the faces of the franchise, obviously aren’t used to losing. They’ll be playing out their first meaningless September in ages, trying to help an embattled manager, who’s possibly on borrowed time, keep their team playing hard, if not particularly well, til the end.

I do not envy them. I do not envy their teammates. I do not envy said manager, Bobby Valentine, or his boss, GM Ben Cherington.

But for the first time in seven years, I don’t begrudge them, either…

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