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Sarah and the Goon Squad Sarah is a SAHM of six year old b/g twins living in the D.C. Metropolitan Area. You can find Sarah at her personal blog, Sar...
 
 
 
 

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What Kind of Fans Boo Their Own Team?

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Yesterday I was lucky enough to have the opportunity to do something I have wanted to do for years. I got to see my favorite football team, The Tampa Bay Buccaneers, play against the Washington Redskins at Fed Ex Field in Landover, Maryland.

I have probably been to 20 Bucs games but this was the first time I got to see an away game. I've lived in the Washington D.C. Metro area for almost four years and this is the very first time since I have lived here that Tampa Bay played the Redskins up here. I wore my Buccaneers jersey and everything.

I was slightly concerned that I would get some razzing wearing the enemy uniform but none of the Redskins fans said anything to me.

I was happy. It was a beautiful day. For a while the Bucs were even winning. This was when it started.

The Redskins fans started booing their own team.

The first time I thought. Aw, that is sad and I felt bad for the guy who dropped the pass. Then they booed their quarterback, Jason Campbell. He had just thrown an incomplete pass.

Then I started feeling sick.

This was their team. I watched my team (who are now 0-4 by the way) blow a perfectly good lead. The Bucs stunk up the field but I was there cheering them on every single play. I was amid 50,000 Washington fans applauding the enemy and they were booing their own team in their own stadium.

I'm not saying that the 'skins were playing well. I am not saying I agree with the play calling. I am not saying that the fans shouldn't have been disappointed with the level of performance they were seeing.

What I am saying is that booing your own team is mean. It is bad manners.

I know that this isn't going to win me any friends at the bus stop, but I was appalled. I knew it happened at the last Washington home game, but I wasn't there for that. I didn't hear how loud it it was. I didn't hear how mad they sounded. The crowd sounded bitter.

I bet you will never hear Lori booing the San Diego Chargers.

As upset as I was by the event, some people here in DC see it as a positive thing.

Say for example, you are a Caps fan:

It’s a storied franchise, filled with championships and great names and history that bleeds into just about everyone around here – until now. People are pissed, and for good reason, with anger the likes of which I’ve never seen in my 27 years as a Washingtonian.

They’re annoyed and confused and frustrated. But most of all they’re searching for something, anything, that can give them some enjoyment as the Skins stumble to disappointing losses and equally disappointing wins.

Enter the Caps, the team filled with young superstars and contagious personalities. Enter the team led by the underdog coach, with the Russian phenom who could just as easily be that kid on your block who used to fry ants with a magnifying glass as he could be the Next One. Enter the group of guys who are so quotable they make Clinton Portis look like Sidney Crosby. Enter the team that has more potential than all the teams in DC combined, and that has more fun than all the teams in DC combined.

Caps Chick - A View From the Cheap Seats

Okay, I see her point. I also happen to love the Capitals. Maybe she is right. I know for a fact that the fans around here are pissed off. I'm afraid to listen to talk radio on Mondays. I am still just amazed by a fan base that would would pay $80 for a ticket and then boo.

Maybe that is the problem. Maybe these people expect to see a little more effort on the field for their money.

Or possibly they need to learn some manners.

 

Contributing Editor Sarah also blogs at Sarah and the Goon Squad, Draft Day Suit and MamaPop.

 

 

 

 

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Sarah 5 pts

Laurie says:

if people are so concerned with Snyder and want to make a statement they SHOULD NOT GO. As long as the franchise is financially successful, he can do whatever he wants

and that is exactly right.

Booing doesn't hurt Dan Snyder. Not buying tickets, merchandise and concessions hurts him deeply.

BlogHer Contributing Editor, Sports and Fitness ( http://blogher.org/topic/sports-fitness ) Sarah and the Goon Squad ( http://sarahandthegoonsquad.com/ ) Draft Day Suit ( http://draftdaysuit.com/ )

lauriewrites 5 pts

Let me start this by saying that I think booing is kind of silly regardless of what's going on. "Boooo...booooo." See? Doesn't that sound silly? ;)

Anyway, I wouldn't think "Oh, of course they're booing Dan Snyder, not the guys down there playing the actual game." It doesn't really matter anyway. Paying big bucks for a ticket doesn't guarantee you anything. In that case, I should be booing Maryland football and Dayton basketball every time they play poorly because of the thousands of dollars I shelled out for my degrees. (Not a perfect comparison, but still.) I even think Maryland students sound like asses when they do the "hey hey you suck" chants, even when it's Duke. I know, shocking.

I understand love for a team, I do. But if people are so concerned with Snyder and want to make a statement they SHOULD NOT GO. As long as the franchise is financially successful, he can do whatever he wants (which he can anyway, really, given that he owns the team.) I love the Washington Capitals - loved them when they were horrible and am having a great time watching them do well. I can't imagine myself ever booing them, because when I do that, Pittsburgh wins! (Again.) No way. ;)

Plus, and I am not the kid police, but I don't think it's the best thing to show thousands of kids who are there who don't grasp the finer nuances of pro sports ownership (cough SELLOUT cough) but are just raised to love the football team that it's okay to heckle them when they don't play so well - and, like Sarah said, they still win. Booing bad calls? Sure. Winning teams? Not so much.

Laurie

LaurieWrites ( http://lauriewrites.typepad.com ) ( http://www.flickr.com/photos/rubyshoes )

Photos on Flickr ( http://www.flickr.com/photos/rubyshoes )

vack 5 pts

Sure, I guess you could say it's 'mean' and 'bad manners'. But you're probably closer to the truth when you say maybe people are just expressing their displeasure at the quality of a product that costs them $80. Fans go to football games in the hope that their team will win. Short of that (since losing is an occupational hazard), they hope that their team will play quality football. In places like Tampa Bay where, with few exceptions, losing is an annual ritual, fans have little hope when they go to a game. Like a neglected baby, they've reached a point where they don't even cry. But Redskins fans like myself, still clinging to a dozen year period when the team won 68% of its games and 3 SuperBowls (and participated in a 4th), maintain faint hopes of a return to the past (even when that past already returned in the form of Joe Gibbs' second tour and the team's fortunes still barely changed). So we cry and cry some more -- which sometimes manifests itself as boos on Sundays. Try to think of booing not as bad manners but as the audacity of hope.

ebyrdstarr 5 pts

As a Kansas City fan, I've heard my fair share of booing aimed at both the Royals and the Chiefs.  I understand how entirely frustrated the fans are as those two organizations are quite possibly the most dysfunctional organizations in all of professional sports.  The decisions made by the Royals manager and by the Chiefs former long-term GM were at times mind-boggling and clearly contrary to the decisions that should be made if winning games is the goal. 

But it still kills me every time I hear boos.  I have never done it and I will never do it.  I might be tempted to boo the retiring Royals trainer who has ruined more careers than any other "medical professional" in sports, but I won't ever boo the players.  You don't boo your own team.

Preaching to the Choir ( http://rantsofapublicdefender.blogspot.com/ )

breadwinnerwife 5 pts

I posted something about this on my own blog a few weeks ago out of guilt - guilt because I am a Saints fan and in their first game this season against the Lions, I joined in on booing Reggie Bush after he got his second fumble of the game. It was heat of the moment, and as I said in my blog, I realized that I *hate* when fans of my brother's college baseball team give them and him (A pitcher) a hard time. I don't want to be a fan like that! I will never boo anyone on my team again!

Sarah 5 pts

Booing the other guys (especially when he used to be YOUR guy) is completely understandable.

Boong your own team is just detrimental.

BlogHer Contributing Editor, Sports and Fitness ( http://blogher.org/topic/sports-fitness ) Sarah and the Goon Squad ( http://sarahandthegoonsquad.com/ ) Draft Day Suit ( http://draftdaysuit.com/ )

Sarah 5 pts

Okay, but we were at that game together when Barry Sanders rushed for 215 yards against the Bucs, and you never heard anyone at Tampa Stadium booing.

And that was BRTUTAL.

(On a lighter note, that was in 1997.  Does that make you feel old? It makes me feel old.)

BlogHer Contributing Editor, Sports and Fitness ( http://blogher.org/topic/sports-fitness ) Sarah and the Goon Squad ( http://sarahandthegoonsquad.com/ ) Draft Day Suit ( http://draftdaysuit.com/ )

DanaFiles 5 pts

Booing one's own team is more than wrong.  It's like a sin.  A goucher, even.

I'm a Packers fan (as if you all didn't know, right?) and we would never do that.  Never.

Now of course, we will boo Favre, but only because seeing him in purple is sickening. ;)

Erin Kotecki Vest 5 pts

I kind of understand the booing. I would boo the Lions from home when they would really stink the place up. As a fan you just get really frustrated when your teams play horrible. Its not good for the team, the city, or for sportsmanship but sometimes, it just happens. 

Politics & News Contributing Editor Queen of Spain ( http://queenofspainblog.com/ )

Sarah 5 pts

I get that the fans don't like Dan Snyder. I get that managment and coaching sucks, but where I was they were booing the players. It just made me feel bad for them. Especially Jason Campbell. Sure he was playing poorly, but he isn't a bad player.

And the Redskins WON THE GAME!

BlogHer Contributing Editor, Sports and Fitness ( http://blogher.org/topic/sports-fitness ) Sarah and the Goon Squad ( http://sarahandthegoonsquad.com/ ) Draft Day Suit ( http://draftdaysuit.com/ )

De in D.C. 5 pts

I was at the game yesterday, and will admit to throwing out more than a few "What the *heck* was that?!" comments.  True, the boys weren't playing well, and at times looked to be as cohesive as a high school cheerleading squad dressed up in pads.

I think that the booing comes from a deeper place though.  For a decade, this city has been very discontent with the ownership representing their team.  Snyder not only chargest some of the highest prices for tickets in the league (http://www.khou.com/sports/texans/stories/khou0801..., he also finds other ways to use the team to pad his pockets (www.stubhub.com ( http://www.stubhub.com/ )).  Yes, he's a businessman and the team is an investment, but for millions of fans, it is also the heart and pulse of DC sports.  Booing your team is seen as an attack at the owner that has kept a death-grip on the coaching staff and doesn't allow the upcoming talent (like a certain quarterback missing passes) to reach their potential.  The mountain can't grow if the owner keeps chipping away at the foundation, and the fan base is tired of it.