Quote:
Originally Posted by elly63
When they have a sponsor name on the front of a shirt nothing is organic.
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So the house league hockey team I played goalie for at the age of 6, "Howe's Insurance," was not organic? Local sports sponsorship by local businesses isn't organic?
You're blathering and you don't know what you're talking about. That the system of European football is more organic than professional sports in North America is an objective, inarguable fact. There is an actual connection between the ten or so tiers of football clubs in England and the most popular and legendary sports organizations in the world. This year Sheffield United, in the third tier, played Manchester United in the FA Cup tournament, for example.
So when will the Toronto Marlies be suiting up against the Montreal Canadiens for any game whatsoever, much less a game that actually means a massively great huge fucking deal? That's right: never.
The die-hard Captain Canada act is getting old. I mean, I'm with you when you say it's tough to identify with something when your team is never involved (again, for a contrast, see European football for how organically everything from top to bottom is interconnected), and I agree that it's a damn shame that we're so overshadowed by the U.S. that you get NCAA coverage ahead of Canadian university coverage, but it doesn't help your argument when you denigrate things that you don't understand or refuse to acknowledge the good points of situations in other countries.
Sometimes some things are better than others, and we could learn from them. There are so many aspects of the European football system that are so obviously superior to the way that North American professional sports are run that you could write a book. From the lack of meaningless games due to the lack of "post-season" playoffs, to relegation and promotion between levels, to the organic (there's that word again) connection between the different tiers, to the community involvement and ownership of most of the teams (obviously not all--it helps being a rich Arab if you want to own a football club in the Premier League), to the fan experience in the stands--it's all exponentially superior to what we have here. Leaps and bounds better.
I can acknowledge all that, and still be excited about game 4 tonight between the Raptors and the Heat. Featuring, as it does, a local boy named Cory Joseph playing a crucial role as a backup point guard for Toronto. Hey, look: a connection!
I can also acknowledge that Americans and Canadians still fill the stadiums without knowing and/or caring that so many aspects of sports here really do suck, comparatively: the top-down enforcement of cheering in the form of organists, announcers ("Let's Go!" "Defence!") and cheerleaders; the time-outs; the commercial breaks; the yawning lack of action in between moments of actual action; the bizarre and childish unwillingness to let games end in a draw; the lack of organic (that word again) traditions created by the supporters themselves instead of designed by marketing interns, etc.
Because as much as the NBA and American sports culture make basketball almost unwatchable, I still watch it because I like the game itself.