artical:The hapless Chicago Cubs have been the brunt of baseball's cruelest trivia question for generations. "How long has it been since the Cubs have won the World Series?" team owner Tom Ricketts asked Friday. Two days, their ecstatic fans said.
Washington (dpa) - The Chicago Cubs were the laughingstock of baseball for decades as their last championship in 1908 faded from living memory into fable.
As Major League Baseball's other ancient dry spells - suffered by the cross-town Chicago White Sox and Boston Red Sox - were broken in the early 2000s, the Cubs' century-long drought became an obscure, painful fact.
Team chairman Tom Ricketts, whose family bought the Cubs in 2009, addressed a sea of fans Friday at the city's victory celebration, following the team's 8-7 win over the Cleveland Indians in Wednesday's deciding seventh game of the World Series, which ended Chicago's drought at 108 years.
He posed a "trivia question" to the crowd: "How long has it been since the Cubs have won the World Series?"
At Grant Park, the central green space on Lake Michigan where local resident Barack Obama held his presidential victory rallies in 2008 and 2012, some shouted, "two days."
"The answer is zero years," Ricketts said, "since the Cubs have won the World Series."
Jubilant throngs estimated in the millions across the city met the team along a parade route that started at Wrigley Field on the North Side and wound along stretches of the Michigan Avenue shopping district and Lake Shore Drive.
Even the Chicago River, which is dyed green annually for Saint Patrick's Day, was coloured swimming-pool blue in honour of the Cubs' team colour.
At the Grant Park rally, where fans started arriving before dawn, the team organist played a few notes with the introduction of every team executive, coach and player to lend some of the Wrigley Field atmosphere, even adding flourishes to punctuate the speakers' jokes.
Joe Maddon, the manager who has led the Cubs with a guru-like composure, carried out the World Series trophy - 14 kilograms of sterling silver, with 30 gold-plated pennants, one for each Major League team, surrounding a silver baseball embossed with latitude and longitude lines, symbolizing the world championship.
He said Friday was "Cubstock 2016."
Crane Kenney, a long-time Cubs executive, hinted at the reasons for the long drought as he credited the Ricketts family for finally turning the team around.
"They told us to think big and stop cutting corners," he said. "They changed our culture."
A key moment in the Cubs' reversal of fortunes was the hiring of front-office wunderkind Theo Epstein as president of baseball operations in 2011.
In Boston, he had become the youngest general manager in Major League history as a 28- year-old in 2002, and received much of the credit when the long-suffering Red Sox ended their own championship drought in 2004 and grabbed another trophy in 2007.
The Cubs suffered through last-place finishes for the first three years of Epstein's tenure, as they stockpiled top picks in baseball's amateur draft and built what might be the strongest minor-league system in the sport.
Their young talent ripened in 2015, when the team reached the playoffs but fell one step short of the World Series.
Epstein's grand plan came to fruition this year, when the Cubs were easily the Major Leagues' best regular-season team and rolled through the National League playoffs. In the World Series, Chicago fell to a 3-1 deficit against Cleveland before proving their grit by winning three elimination games on the trot.
At the tender age of 42, Epstein has now guided teams out of droughts that lasted a combined 194 years.
"That parade was insane," he told the fans Friday.
"One hundred and eight years of support, patience, love for this team waiting for what happened two nights ago in Cleveland."
One person in the audience held a "Theo 4 President" sign, four days before US elections.
Epstein described a conversation during his first Chicago season in 2012 with an 83-yearold woman who recognized him after a loss on the street outside Wrigley Field during a five-game losing streak.
"I really want to live to see a World Series. Is it gonna happen?" he recalled her asking.
"Deep down, I know she made it, she's out there somewhere. ... That's what's made it such an emotional month. Our players felt how badly you guys wanted it ... seeing you guys sharing this with your parents and your grandparents, all those who didn't quite make it."
video:
I didn't think of that. I was just thinking of getting to second base for my teammates.
For [INAUDIBLE],, I was coming up behind them.
Favorite coming in. But they came through when they had to.
I know it's business. I know it's business.
If you about it, that's-- [INAUDIBLE] (SINGING) Hey Chicago, what do you say? The Cubs are gonna win today.
Go Cubs, go. (SINGING) Go Cubs, go. Hey Chicago, what do you say? The Cubs are gonna win today.
[INAUDIBLE] [MUSIC PLAYING] The other night, OK, we're out there and we have the most beautiful weather.
And then all of a sudden, it is the worst weather.
But it was absolutely necessary in the moment. And our guys got together.
We composed ourselves and came back out and were able to do what we did.
And now we're all standing here today. So never be deceived about this. It is a player's game.
You know what they say? They say, you go, we go. So I'm going. No, thank you.
Thank you, Cubs-- thank you Cubs fans for coming out.
You are the best in the world. Thank you for having me. Y'all are like family. Y'all are extended family to me. And I love y'all forever. And we had it.
We knew we had it, until we were down 3-1 in the World Series.
It was silent in that clubhouse, let me tell you. And then the man, the myth, the legend, David Ross, spoke up. He said, no, don't do that. Don't hang your heads.
What information does the article convey that is not included in the video interview?
(1 point)
Responses
The article uses accounts from several people to show how the Cubs improved over time.
The article uses accounts from several people to show how the Cubs improved over time.
The article describes in detail how the crowds celebrated the win.
The article describes in detail how the crowds celebrated the win.
The article focuses on how emotional the celebrations were after the game.
The article focuses on how emotional the celebrations were after the game.
The article features one person’s perspective to give deeper background information about the win.
1 answer
The correct response is:
The article describes in detail how the crowds celebrated the win.
This information is conveyed in the article through descriptions of the victory parade, the atmosphere at Grant Park, and the various ways fans expressed their joy, which is not detailed in the video interview.