Not sure how it would get that way... maybe it was never perfect from the factory? Maybe the yoke screw clamp has loosened after 20 years?
Since some of us are freighting rare Macs around the World, it's worth a bit of a mention of how the image geometry can get to be screwed up on a classic Mac.
The Earth's magnetic field interferes with the position and geometry of the image. In particular, if a Mac sold in the Northern Hemisphere is moved to the Southern Hemisphere, the image will be too far up and to the left and the sides won't be perfectly straight. I speak from experience here: the Mac 128, 512 and Plus were all manufactured and adjusted in the Northern Hemisphere without taking this in to account. Since I worked for an Apple dealer in the Southern Hemisphere, this meant that every brand new Mac had the image all messed up when it was taken out of the box. I must have adjusted hundreds of them back in the day.
Around the time the Classic came out (not sure exactly when), we started receiving machines that had pretty good geometry straight out of the box (not perfect, but pretty close). I asked one of the Apple techs about it when I was doing some training. I was told that they had started performing the factory image alignment inside a large Helmholtz Coil
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helmholtz_coil. Basically, this allowed them to "dial in" the magnetic characteristics for any spot on Earth. For Australia, this meant "Sydney". I was quite some distance south of Sydney, so this explained the geometry not being perfect for us.
The funny thing was that sometimes machines would go out to the customer without being aligned. People very rarely noticed, but if someone pointed it out to them, the alignment problem would then drive them crazy until it was fixed!
[EDIT] And with colour displays, the problems are more serious: purity problems (patches where the "hue" of the colour is wrong) on top of the geometry problems experienced with black and white displays. It's *much* harder to fix a colour CRT. They had different part numbers for Northern Hemisphere / Southern Hemisphere.