I mean, I thought the Rutgers-Notre Dame game was good but this one is amazing
Going for an 10 (edit -blame the gummy) second call I guess... StrangeWTF?! Why didn't they foul right away?
Way tool.Tool
Has anyone seen this San Francisco dude and Steph Curry at the same place, at the same time?
"Give me a "p""................
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That's very bad. Sorry for that.Law and order? Prison time?
I mean...I've been spit at by Yankees fans...and I'm just a lowly Texas Rangers fan.![]()
I share your feeling on the story, and adult fans mocking a child is undignified.Oh yeah, they're definitely obnoxious.
@Ignatius Shang I can't say why home fans in the US are tolerant to visitors. I do think it's a good thing though. I've had good and bad experiences as a visiting fan and right or wrong, I project those experiences onto the entire fanbase/school/state. And for that reason, I cringe when I see our fans being inhospitable to visitors. One of my very few bad experiences at a UI home game was during the Groce era after we beat Purdue. I was sitting by a young Purdue fan, maybe 7 or 8 years old. First game he ever saw in person. He was in awe thr entire game. When the final buzzer sounded, a couple adult Illinois fans turned to him and started mocking him causing him to cry. I can only hope that he and his parents understand that those were just a couple of bad apples (oranges?) and as a fanbase, we're better than that.
Although I didn't have this personal experience, this is exactly my impression on English soccer rivalry culture. I have been an Arsenal fan for over a decade and have been following Premier League pretty closely.I think there are occasional flare ups here. I hear Raider fans can get physical. But o think mostly it’s a cultural thing with European soccer fans. It starts early in life and they take their tribal allegiance seriously. I remember as a school kid in England one year while my dad was on sabbatical, there was this group of kids who would roam the playground chanting “Bristol or Rover?” and if they asked you you had to say who your team was and I was always worried what I was supposed to say, thinking I better pick the right team or I’m gonna get my !!! kicked right here on the playground. Scary.
As @Bebes_J mentioned earlier, I think it is a cultural thing that related to a sense of tribal allegiance. I have heard the tense atmosphere in the games between Istanbul clubs (especially between Galatasaray,and Fenerbahce), and I can imagine it is similar for other clubs in Turkey. I also heard that in some Serbian and Argentinian games, it was almost a war.It is kinda strange. US sports fandom is a bit of an anomaly honestly. In the majority of other countries, being a visiting fan is a tense and even at times dangerous proposition.
I am Turkish-American myself, and have been a visiting fan for a couple Turkish soccer matches. All the fans of my team were literally cordoned off by police pre-game, and then got a kind of police escort out after game. Multiple other fans (not in my group!) had knives and the like confiscated. And it wasn't even anything close to a rivalry game. You basically can't take kids to games at all in that kind of atmosphere, which is pretty sad.
I am very glad that sports fandom isn't like that here and have no idea why other countries haven't been able to emulate it.
You're forgetting the Hampton over Iowa state team led by Jamaal tinsley in 2001 when it was a 15/2 upset.In terms of all-time tourney upsets in the expanded format era (since 1985), I’d put St Francis over Kentucky 6th.
1. Obviously MD-BC over Virginia in 18 is tops. Not just that it was a 16 over a 1, but that it wasn’t really even close.
2. Richmond over Syracuse in 91. First time a 2 over a 15. A really good SU team.
3. Santa Clara over Arizona in 93. No one knew who Steve Nash was yet. They found out. AZ had 7 future NBA players on it.
4. Norfolk St over Missouri in 12. If you look at the disparity in metrics this actually might be the biggest upset of all time. Norfolk was 318th out of 344 teams in points allowed.
5. Lehigh over Duke also in 12. This was shocking based on reputation. But if you look at the metrics, Duke was significantly over-seeded and Lehigh was significantly under-seeded. If you took the school names off the jerseys, this was closer to a 12-5 upset in talent. Still an upset, but not uncommon.
let’s hope you’re right. Brad can be as locked in as he wants, he’s not throwing up shots or playing defense. If we win, we’ll say the extra days helped, if we don’t, we’ll say the opposite.This is why Coach Underwood took a page out of Izzo's book. It's not like we didn't care about the B1G tourney... we did. But getting the two day bye, one and done, two days of extra rest, and some billboard material. It's not the worst way to go into the tourney. Brad said he's locked in on the dance this year. Let's see if the team delivers. I am cautiously optimistic. Which is new. And somewhat alarming now that I think about it.
I think that's very unlikely. The last game before the brackets are announced is the best time slot. Like nearly every other year, our final is highest rated.Agree. Would be best for the B10 conference to change the BTT timing. Maybe end it on Saturday? I know, will never happen, too much TV money, etc. Conference couldn't care less if teams are gassed going into the NCAAT. As long as they get 8-9 teams in the league's work is done.
He also forgot the name of the school that upset Kentucky a few hours ago, so...You're forgetting the Hampton over Iowa state team led by Jamaal tinsley in 2001 when it was a 15/2 upset.
Richmond won their conference tournament.If Iowa loses I will never bet on teams that won their conference tournament ever again
Lol touché but I mean in the power 6 conferencesRichmond won their conference tournament.
Just try thinking about something else, like baseball.I have a question for a long time: I have been in several home games in Champaign and the fans of the visiting teams are making noise in the seats next to us, even when our players are shooting free throws. I have also been to many soccer games (in China and in Europe) and such thing never happens - they are strictly limited to certain stands, and are usually separated by security guards, otherwise the fans of the visiting teams will be surrounded and perhaps beaten by the overwhelmingly majority of the fans of the home team when they cheer, let alone booing the home players.
So my question is: why US fans are so tolerant to the fans of the visiting teams?
You’re going to bring up Hampton over Iowa state but not oral Roberts over OSU, FGC over Georgetown, or mtsu over msu?You're forgetting the Hampton over Iowa state team led by Jamaal tinsley in 2001 when it was a 15/2 upset.