CHICAGO – Diane Sotsky and her two older sisters would get home from school after 3 p.m. in the 1950s and take a listen. If they heard the sounds of an ongoing Cubs game, they would take a short walk down the street to Wrigley Field.
"The usher at the gate would let them in and they would watch the last innings," Melissa Levy said. "Sometimes, they still would be at the ballpark and one of the players would give them a ride home."
Diane is Melissa's mother. Melissa is a former Star Tribune reporter, as is her husband, Jeff Shelman. They were spotted walking on Sheffield Avenue. outside Wrigley Field. Melissa, with her Cubs wear, was accused of being a post-World Series, front-running Cubs fan.
She told the tale of her family's background in the Wrigley neighborhood to disprove empathically this accusation. She also had evidence of genuine Cub-dom on her cellphone with an exchange of texts from Nov. 2, 2016, that started with Diane's message at 11:51 p.m.:
Mom: Are you still up?
Melissa: No, I went to sleep in the 8th. What happened?
Mom: The Cubs just Won.
Melissa had the same laugh at her mother's politeness this weekend as she did on that glorious night that the Cubs won the World Series for the first time in 108 years.
"I called and said, 'Mom, of course I'm up, with the Cubs playing to win the World Series,' " Melissa said. "I was happy for me, but I was so happy for Mom. She has loved the Cubs her whole life."