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A bunch of lefties talking sports? How cool is that! Check out Dirty Hippie Sports Talk.
I played a year of football in high school and I can remember an incident after a game at New Brunswick in which fans of the hometeam got a bit unruly after the game, making for a tense situation and a great deal of fear. The team was on the bus when the fans acted up — I think we probably won that game, but our main running back was hurt badly and there were probably some words during the contest.
The fans rocked the bus some, and it was just an ugly and potentially dangerous moment.
I was reminded of this because of a story we reported in The Cranbury Press this week about a melee at a Colonia basketball game after Monroe staged a furious comeback to win. The Colonia fans assaulted Monroe’s fans, sending on to the hospital — a fact that should have administrators at all high schools concerned.
The fight took place on Dec. 18, a week ago, but got little press until we reported on it. Then, on Tuesday, a fight broke out in Allentown after a game, demonstrating that there is something very wrong with American society.
Look, the New Brunswick incident, which took place in 1978, shows that this kind of behavior is nothing new. But the fights at the high schools are part of a larger trend that includes brutality at youth league games, professional contests (fans taunting and players going into the stands) that is starting to make our sports culture resemble South American soccer.
Monroe Coach Bob Turco put the entire thing in perspective, calling it a “sign of the times.”
He used a Monroe student as an example, saying the girl had told him she wouldn’t wear her Monroe colors or jacket to away games for fear of retaliation from opposing fans.
“The sad part is this has become something to expect,” he said. “It used to be about school spirit and supporting your team.”
Sadly, it no longer is.
Matt Yglesias offers one of the funniest posts I’ve come across lately — mixing sports (Boston titles) and politics in a way that lampoons political journalism.
I note that when Bill Clinton was president, we didn’t have this plague of Hub championships that Bush has unleashed.
You go, Matt.
Leave it to The Onion to capture the essence of the American sports world in the year 2007. Here is the lede:
SAN FRANCISCO—Although Barry Bonds remains the target of criticism over his possible—some say almost certain—use of performance-enhancing substances, the fact that Bonds has not been implicated in dogfighting, nightclub shootings, gambling, or murdering his family has transformed his controversial pursuit of the all-time home-run record into the feel-good sports story of the summer.
The sad thing, unfortunately, is that as funny as this is it’s way too true.
South Brunswick Post, The Cranbury Press
The Blog of South Brunswick
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