Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Ungrateful Fans...Is it a Northeast Thing?


Photo courtesy of Bleacher Report.

On Sunday, the fans of the New England Patriots turned on their own team during a playoff game against the Baltimore Ravens. They booed the home team, with many saying it was due to the team's performance. Patriots nose tackle Vince Wilfork was quoted in the Boston Globe saying, "It felt like we were playing an away game, that's what it felt like." While Boston has shown this trend most recently, due to the city's impressive championship runs in multiple sports and higher expectations thereafter, other East Coast cities have had fans boo the home team, namely, Philadelphia, New York, and Washington DC. The act of booing the home team is a foreign concept to those here on the West Coast, with the exception of the Oakland Raiders.

There is a certain amount of gratitude to athletes that must be acknowledged, especially football players. These athletes are real people who bang, smash, flatten, and run into each other with high injury risk (concussions, torn ACLs and MCLs, etc.) Teams want to play at home because they'll have the crowd support. Seattle and New Orleans are great examples of a home-field advantage. Teams feed off the crowd energy, hard to do when said crowd is booing you.

Booing the home-team should be strongly discouraged by the fans. Stay classy and respect the fact that its real people playing the game. After all, rooting for a team means rooting for them through all the ups as well as the downs.

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