Your favourite player is not a victim, nor are they a hero, but a person succeeding (or not) not because they deserve it, but because sports is a lottery - chance, fortune and luck.
No sportsperson is an antagonist destroying the world order and none is a protagonist saving the day.
I think of a poem by Kurt Vonnegut;
āTiger got to hunt, bird got to fly; Man got to sit and wonder 'why, why, why?'...
In our endeavour to answer the question "why, why, why?" we begin assigning moral weight to wins and losses - maybe to fuel our own feeling of moral superiority, and thus creating moral proxy wars of sorts, or because we simply don't want to accept a world that is unfair, indiscriminate and random.
But that isn't how the world works, that isn't how sports work. Sports does not know good and bad, it does not know right from wrong.
Sports has no moral compass.
But humans need answers, and if no cause-and-effect is evident, we will make them. Because;
...Tiger got to sleep, bird got to land; Man got to tell himself he understand.ā
But remember;
Your favourite player is not a victim, nor are they a hero, but a person succeeding (or not) not because they deserve it, but because sports is a lottery - chance, fortune and luck.











