I believe
this is going to be the most controversial thing I’ve ever written on sports, and it might not even be close, and that’s probably saying something.
And, I want to preface it by saying that this is just a theory I have. I do not
have stone cold hard facts to back it up. I don’t have evidence to support it.
It’s just my opinion of what I’m seeing.
The Super
Bowl between the New England Patriots and the defending champion Seattle
Seahawks is just a few days away and I’ve been asking people all week who they
want to win the big game – not who they think will win – but who they want to
win. The majority of these people have been saying the Patriots and have
followed it up with reasons why they don’t like the Seahawks and those reasons
always start with Richard Sherman, whom they never seem to mention by his full
name, to these fans he’s just “Sherman” like some nefarious Marvel villain.
The fact
that these people are overwhelmingly rooting for the Patriots is interesting to
me, because for the last decade-plus the Patriots have largely been the most
hated team in the NFL, and one I’ve had to defend multiple times. Part of the
reason the Patriots have seemingly been the most hated team in the NFL is they
have this aura of cheating that surrounds them, and that has reared its ugly
head recently with “Deflate-gate.” I’ve found that the Pats aren’t necessarily
a team many of these people rooting for them to win the Super Bowl are wanting
to root for – many have said they’re merely rooting for the lesser of two
evils. That makes me wonder how a team that has multiple times been accused of
cheating and people have largely despised for running roughshod over the AFC
for more than a decade is the “lesser of two evils” over a Seahawks team, that
I personally find the most enjoyable team in the NFL to watch and the only
knock you could possibly find against them is they are the defending champs and
some people don’t like to see the same team win in multiple seasons, for
whatever reason that might be.
They bring
up Sherman, but is his brashness really any different than the arrogance
exhibited by Patriots star tight end Rob Gronkowski or really the Pats team
overall? You’d have to ask yourself if black brashness (or arrogance if you’d
prefer) is viewed differently than white brashness and I think it is.
It then occurred
to me why some of these people might be rooting for the Pats over the Seahawks.
The Patriots biggest stars are Tom Brady, Rob Gronkowski and arguably Julian
Edelman. The Seahawks biggest stars are Richard Sherman, Russell Wilson and
Marshawn Lynch. The Patriots are a largely white football team. I don’t know
what percentage of the team is white, and frankly it doesn’t really matter, but
they seem like the whitest team in the league. Whereas the Seahawks, you could
argue, seem like the blackest team in the league. Can you even name one white
star on the team?
Again, this
doesn’t really matter or at least it shouldn’t, but I think it’s why a lot of
people are rooting for the Patriots to beat the Seahawks in the Super Bowl.
Now, I’m not accusing these people of racism. No, I don’t believe they are
racist at all. In fact, I believe that they don’t even realize this is playing
a factor in their decision of which team to root for. I believe subconsciously
they are choosing to root for the guys that look like them, without really
thinking about it. We’ve seen recently in this country that there are racial
issues, whether we want to believe it or not they exist, and frequently people
will agree with or go with those who look like they do or believe the way they
do.
It’s
controversial I know. Most people are likely going to think it asinine, I know.
But, I think race is playing a certain role in who people are choosing to root
for in this year’s Super Bowl. How else can you explain why so many are hoping
America’s most hated team beats the Seahawks on Sunday?
Get your head fixed. It's fucking broke and no longer works.
ReplyDeleteNo-one will want to admit this, but you're probably right. The Pats are a successful team and an integrated team (about half white/black) with lots of white players in "marquee" positions -- Qback, tight end, wide receiver, linebacker. The Seahawks are a mostly black team, with even a black Qback. They might have 3 or 4 white players on their starting 22. People who are painfully truthfull might also say that the Seahawks also have kind of a "black lowlife" swagger to them, as personified by Sherman -- he just celebrated the birth of his child from a "girlfriend." People may not admit it, but I bet if an anonymous poll were taken, it would show racial disparities. But of course no-one will admit it and I'm even commenting anonymously.
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