This year I’m starting to experience difficulties in
my fandoms of certain teams versus the larger picture of whom I am and what I
represent in a new age. Many of you who have read AD&AD over the years know
that I was a sports junkie – and unknowingly to you, I really don’t pay
attention to the contests anymore beyond what my alma mater and the Miami Heat
basketball team do because life is so much more than a game. In case you missed
it, we finally cut the cord to save money:
Despite thousands of cable channels, we only watched at maximum twelve
shows on a weekly basis and the files saved to our DVR were so extensive that
binge-watching each show would’ve been time-prohibitive.
But more of that some other time – just not today.
I’m already enough of a contradiction as are most of
us (if you really look in the mirror and admit it to yourselves). For example,
I’m the guy who lives in a mostly white neighborhood and wears a Black Lives
Matter t-shirt on my days off to smoke ribs in the backyard and practically
lives in a white Tommy Hilfiger baseball cap. Then there is also my fandom of
two specific Boston-area teams: the Red
Sox and Patriots; I cannot surrender years of loving the Miami Heat for the
damned Boston Celtics, and my Starter jacket was the San Jose Sharks NOT the
Bruins. Allow me to explain those before
any more castigating happens like this.
Boston
Red Sox
Years ago when I packed up a little red crossover
and moved cross-country for a job (big mistake, but I met some pretty great
guys and gals – their relationships come in a different blog), I was a typical
Arkansan whose own team passions were the club with the tightest ties to the
home state (Dallas Cowboys, St. Louis Cardinals/Atlanta Braves) and who once lived
for Razorbacks football game days at War Memorial Stadium in Little Rock and
have the memories from the old Ray Winder Field which has been converted into
another concrete jungle, but this time for state employees. In New England, the
Saturday afternoon college football games weren’t the religious blowouts (pit
masters and fry daddies cooking those second to none pregame meals along with
Arkansans of all stripes unifying for the flagship school to take down Alabama,
Ole Miss, Texas, Auburn, Mississippi State, South Carolina, Tennessee, and of
course, LSU) that I was accustomed to back home in the South so I drove nine
miles into town to catch whatever ESPN was showing that particular afternoon.
That also meant calling the Hogs (Woo! Pig! Sooie) was initially met with some
crazy looks until Arkansas began playing and as the cameras showed the state’s
third largest city* in Razorback red and white raising arms, people understood
what I was doing and why I wore my Arkansas t-shirt every Saturday that fall.
*Reynolds Stadium in Fayetteville holds eighty-something-thousand
souls to capacity. This is the reason why I consider it Arkansas’s third
largest city on game days only after Little Rock and Fort Smith.
Whoops, I digressed. Here’s the real story of how I
became a Red Sox fan:
Rewind back to October 2006 with me. Remember two
years earlier when the Boston Red Sox ended their 86-year curse between World
Series titles? We beat the St. Louis Cardinals to get over the hump and I
remembered (at the time) how respectful Cards fans were during the sweep.
Perhaps the moment was too big for Albert Pujols and Co., but beating the
Yankees alone would’ve been enough much less the way we did it coming back from
3-0 with New York pulling out the brooms in anticipation of a sweep in the
ninth inning of Game 4 to winning Game 7! Anyway, I was working for a certain
environmental nonprofit organization which implicitly encouraged drinking at
its development days (alcohol was discouraged before 4 pm, but no one really
observed that rule especially with a few working kegs nearby) and listening to
the MLB playoffs during a go-kart race. My car simply happened to be the first
one parked past the finish line and as participants finished the race, we all
congregated around the tailgate and proceeded to destroy a 30 pack of PBR. It
did not matter that the Cards were beating the New York Mets for the NL pennant
as much as a country boy switching his team allegiance to Red Sox Nation and
having a blast drinking with longtime citizens and Massholes* many of whom are
still friends to this day.
*Massholes comes from how Massachusetts residents
drive. For further proof, check out I-95 through Boston or the Turnpike, or
note any car with the MA license plate.
New
England Patriots
You’d never think of it, but in my family, being a
fan of any club aside from the Dallas Cowboys was a bit of sacrilege. Yet one
wide receiver made it cool to be a Pats fan:
Randy Moss. Here is Mr.
I-Play-When-I-Wanna-Play lining up in the red, white, and blue catching
touchdown passes from the greatest quarterback of this era buying into what we
all know as the Patriot Way. While I wish that 2007 team could’ve finished the
job and become the greatest undefeated team in NFL history, fifteen seconds and
one miraculous catch made us 18-1 instead of the 19-0 we were so destined to
become. Two things I respected (and a draw to Pats Nation) were the attention
to detail and the “do your job” mantra extolled by Coach Bill Belichick that no
player is bigger than the system, not even one surefire Hall of Famer Tom
Brady.
Now what does this have to do with my fandom?
Simple: I’m
still a black man in a United States
of America, and for enough people, my skin color trumps (not funny, but true)
the love I have for the Red Sox and Patriots in 2017.
You can also say 45 and the alt-right have forced me
to question what I like about New England – the football team, not the region. I’ve
also explained to my god-brother just because the racism up North isn’t
in-your-face as it is here in the South, it doesn’t mean it you won’t know and
feel the covert microaggressions such as having no sales person open a fitting
room at the Gap or being ignored at Chili’s and the manager begrudgingly has to
comp the other members of your party in spite of your very presence. Let’s not
go into why I feel the way I do about law enforcement as a few rotten apples
view you as guilty forcing you to prove innocence – and even then, no apologies
for the mistreatment or false accusations.
These circumstances, among others, are what brought
us to the events surrounding Adam Jones from a few days ago at Fenway. Super
fans who had too much to drink threw peanuts at him – and considering how black
athletes have historically been treated in Beantown (see Bill Russell’s own
comments for why), definitely a reminder not to visit during free agency. Even
more than SEC schools, Boston-area fans tend to “own” their players more so
than in some of the more segregated cities such as Chicago, Milwaukee, and St.
Louis expecting them to stick to sports instead of addressing the inequities of
society! Although David “Big Papi” Ortiz is best known for the expletive-laced
saying after the Patriot Day bombing, one could only wonder about his own
legend if he had not transcended race as the outfielder who willed the club to
its third World Series crown in a nine-year span in 2013. Would he have just been
another Dominican ballplayer without the October heroics?
Orioles notes: Adam Jones uses donation to continue conversation on race https://t.co/BGjipCKBUY pic.twitter.com/CGOU3dJDkW— Baltimore Sun Sports (@BaltSunSports) May 14, 2017
I know, everyone loves a winner until he loses
(Alabama quarterback Jalen Hurts), and to some, does something controversial
enough to upset the hierarchy of privilege (when for 49ers quarterback
Colin Kaepernick knelt during the National Anthem – which he was entitled to do
within his First Amendment right, or is that a whites-only entity?) leading to
scores of criticisms from the so-called morality police in addition to those
who supposedly are the arbiters of right and wrong in an unequal nation (Bill
O’Reilly, Skip Bayless). You know, the one that claims to have equal rights to
all men except for those who pick my cotton or vegetables; value your outspoken
nature until it exposes fundamental hypocrisies in how justice is meted; and
marveling at your articulate speech and underpaying for your intellect (former
President Barack Obama).
Not every sports fan represents the worst of
humanity; sadly, they are the ones whose foolishness has come to symbolize an
entire fan base. Growing up in the Natural State, it would have been nice to
see a black starting quarterback for the Hogs in the past twenty-five years
since the University of Arkansas joined the Southeastern Conference, but it’s
pretty safe to say boosters have a hand in converting brothers to receivers,
running backs, cornerbacks, and any other position simply to prevent seeing
them under center leading the offense and otherwise being the face of the
program. The talent has always been on the Hill yet the only brother that got serious
run was Quinn Grovey – and I was ten years old when he kept Arkansas a regular
participant in the Cotton Bowl!
I graduated from a PWI fifteen years ago – Henderson
State. It’s pretty safe to say that was an incredibly fun four-and-a-half year
period of my life where I met my wife and best friends; cheered on fraternity
brothers as the football team barely won one game per season and
unconditionally supported the men’s and women’s basketball, baseball, swimming,
and softball teams in competition; learned about myself as a manager, mentor,
and student alike; and those house parties in the WO! In reconciling my own sports
fandom, we play the game not only to win but to also develop life skills that
translate into higher levels of teamwork and leadership that will take us
further than what some peon across the street yells at us from the free-throw
line.
Being passionate can cross into being boorish if we
as fans do not police ourselves from showing our worst characteristics.
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