Beware the Bandwagon

                
                
                

		
		
		


	
	
        
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Beware the Bandwagon
By Doug Wilson | Published  10/8/2007 | Atomic Sports Media | Rating:
Doug Wilson
Doug Wilson is a current student at The Ohio State University studying
communications.  After graduation he hopes to find a job in the
sports field in anyway possible.  He is a die-hard Cleveland Browns,
Cleveland Indians, Cleveland Cavalier and of course Ohio State
Buckeye fan.  His favorite things to do incude playing flag football and
basketball on eight foot tall basketball hoops.  His favorite athlete of
all time is Sandy Alomar Jr.

 

 

View all articles by Doug Wilson

Beware the Bandwagon
As everybody and their brother knows by now, LeBron James was recently spotted at the Indians-Yankees playoff game sporting a New York hat.

When interviewed by Craig Sager, LeBron also mentioned that growing up as a kid he was a New York Yankees, Dallas Cowboys and Chicago Bulls fan. So while just about everyone has brought up the argument of whether LeBron should have worn his Yankee cap or not, I want to talk about another topic: frontrunner fans.

What is a frontrunner fan? It’s a fan who simply selects their rooting interest based on the recent success of the team. That is the only way to explain a fan that roots for the Yankees, Bulls, and Cowboys, who were probably the three best franchises in their respective leagues during the 1990s.

Now, this is only my opinion, and however you choose your favorite teams is up to you. However, what fun is it if you are constantly switching your rooting interest from team to team? That takes away the whole point of being a fan. If you just start rooting for a winning team there is never any excitement because you can always just choose a new team.

To be a true fan you must pick your favorite teams for a certain reason, hopefully because it’s your hometown teams, then root for them through thick and thin. If you root for teams other than your hometown teams, that is all right as long as you have a good reason for it. For example, if your father rooted for that team as a kid, it is OK to continue that tradition.

The worst thing a person could do is jump form team to team but continue to brag about them. Last year, as a die-hard Ohio State fan, I had a friend talk smack to me regarding West Virginia, Michigan, and Florida. This all occurred in one season and the person claimed to be a fan of all three programs during different times of the year. It doesn’t get worse than that. I don’t even understand how you could feel proud to back a team you had never rooted before they won the national championship.

So while everybody has their reason for choosing their favorite teams, all that matters is you stick with that team. Don’t flip-flop in the middle of the season. Don’t brag about a team you never rooted for before they won a championship. Take pride in your team and follow them through thick and thin and it will be much more rewarding when they do win a title.

Being a die-hard sports fan is a unique thing. Casual fans just don’t get it. They don’t understand how you could be so emotionally invested in a bunch of guys or girls who don’t even know you. The sad thing is they are probably right, but for some reason I feel like I have been punched in the stomach after a tough loss. That is what a fan is all about, feeling like you are part of the team. You take pride in being the sixth man or the twelfth man.

I recently even had the idea pointed out to me that maybe your own personal life reflects the teams you root for. I believe this is true to a certain degree. Maybe LeBron roots for the Yankees because he is use to being successful. I know myself I am a very optimistic person and sports fan in particular. As a Cleveland fan, this is almost a necessity to not hang yourself. To me, no pick can go wrong during the NFL draft for the Browns. As we all know, this is not true.

In the end, however, how you choose your favorite teams is probably irrelevant, but just stick with that team. Don’t jump from winning team to winning team. Don’t pretend like you aren’t a fan if your team is struggling. If you stand by your team it will make it that much more fulfilling when they win a championship. Trust me, as a Browns fan, when they win the Super Bowl, I won’t even know what to do with myself.
 
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  • Comment #1 (Posted by an unknown user)
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    Develop your points....a couple times in here you went on to say something that didn't make sense- forcing me to go back an infer what you should have typed.......Also, I know you're only in college- but when the Browns win the Super Bowl you'll be long gone.
     
  • Comment #2 (Posted by Matt Gardner)
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    I'll happily side with a few points you make. The trend - glory supporting, as we call it - is Manchester United and, recently, Chelsea over here in England. Still, you haven't really defined "good reason" to support a team other than family ties or personality reflection. I follow Pittsburgh's Penguins and Steelers (particularly the latter), not because of anything special, but because I liked the name "Penguins" when I was 11 - the Steelers were a natural step from that. I don't think that's personality reflection, though. True, I've stuck with them - but I don't think it's completely right to chastise people on account of them following a good team to watch. It's natural for fans of the sport.

    My main love is Hartlepool United and I hate fans of clubs in my area (Newcastle, Sunderland, Middlesbrough) who live in areas/towns with smaller teams (Darlington, Hartlepool, etc). However, I love watching Arsenal do well and I want them to win the Premiership; their football is brilliant, but I've never seen them play live. I never will. When they stand no chance, I'll follow Liverpool, etc etc.

    However, the crux of my argument lies here: success, which said fans chase, is much different here than it is there on account of our tiered league system. Nobody gets relegated in your leagues - if they do badly they get rewarded! American fans, by our standards, don't know what it's like to support a bad team - the fans on the opposite end of the scale to those you describe in this article. Even you, a die-hard Browns fan, will know that your team has had success. Your overall record is more wins than losses (414-354-10 and counting). I wish my team had a stat like that.

    Granted, you lost your team for a couple years due to Art Modell. Other than the threat of relocation (which is utterly ridiculous, but that's another argument), you'll still have HUGE revenue, the club will thrive and, most of all, the resurrection of the Browns stands as a testament to its no doubt prolonged longevity. You still have a huge 73,000 stadium though. My home team holds a tenth of that (7,642). You get great draft picks if you do badly which you can coach up to amazing status (one which Quinn may indeed join). If we do badly, we stay bad, or things get worse (free trade in soccer and all).

    Point is, it's SO easy for the likes of a poor Browns fan (no offence, but completely true) to mock others for supporting more successful teams (which was, after week 1, seemingly 31 of them). The truth of the matter is, it's so much easier to stick with a team there because they'll ALWAYS have a chance at the big one through adopted fairness tactics. My Hartlepool will NEVER get into the Premiership, but I'll love them always. We accept this as fact now. You don't have to come to terms with anything close to that, yet we're technically in as direct a competition as you.

    As you said yourself, you live in hope of a Super Bowl. In 5 years you may be 16-0. Here it's different. I think you should count yourself lucky before mocking fans who flit between support. Although they are, broadly speaking, dickheads, your system is so good that you will always have that light at the end of the tunnel - that Vince Lombardi Trophy that you COULD win - as a solid supporter. You'll have the money, fans and draft picks in your favour. Here, most of us have nothing close to that to live for.

    </wildly meandering rant>
     
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