azdad1978
Championship!!!!
Dan Bickley
The Arizona Republic
Sept. 21, 2005 12:00 AM
Pity all ticket-buying Cardinals fans, the ones stuck in NF-Hell.
The team has a 14 percent chance of making the playoffs. The stadium smells worse every game, a combination of sweat, stale beer and 47-year-old restrooms. Admission guarantees nothing but a red face.
After all, if the sun doesn't get you, the embarrassment will.
Surely, you will all have luxury suites in the afterlife for your loyalty and suffering. That is, except for the drunkards, morons and vulgarians that can make Sun Devil Stadium one of the worst experiences in the league.
So, to all of you idiots who threw water bottles on the field near the end of Sunday's bitter loss to the Rams: Please. Chill. Out. There are only six Sundays left in purgatory.
"It's normally a pretty good crowd," said Tempe's Jim Norris, a season ticket holder since 1988. "Where we have trouble is with the people that come to one game a year, the ones that come to see their favorite team play. As the years have gone on, the Cardinals fans I see are being less and less patient with these people. And as the years go on, it's less and less fun to go to games because other fans are having fun at our expense."
It all reached a boiling point on Sunday, when tempers were flaring long before kickoff. The NFL's new pat-down policy kept people in line and on the streets, even though turnstiles were empty. Thousands missed kickoff. With separate lines for different genders, Norris was in his seat 20 minutes before his wife finally showed up.
"It's an extra layer of security to enhance the comfort of the fans," NFL spokesman Greg Aiello said. "But it has to be implemented properly, and the teams are in charge of that."
Those efforts were clearly botched in Tempe, and making matters worse, the temperature was unusually warm. The game was another three-legged dog, and the ending was frighteningly familiar.
It all made for a volatile brew, and it eventually made a mockery of the NFL's new security measures, which were designed to keep large, improvised explosives from entering any of its 31 stadiums. Three hours after getting frisked outside the gates, enraged fans simply used large, improvised projectiles to litter the field, sending one photographer to the hospital.
Well before Sunday's game, it was sometimes hard to miss the dark side of Sun Devil Stadium. I know parents who have taken young kids to a Cardinals game, only to hear language that would make HBO squirm. Now, those parents are swearing that they'll never go back. I know females who attended a game and would feel more comfortable walking past a construction site. There is just something about the second-class feel of this NFL experience that can drag the game into the gutter.
Look, it's not good situation for anyone. The team can't get good, which means it can't get television slots on Sunday and Monday nights to combat the early-season heat. Arizona State would've upgraded its stadium years ago, except they're waiting until the Cardinals are gone for good. And given the early tone of the 2005 season, it seems to be a matter of playing out the string.
Until then, it wouldn't hurt to show a little class and a little couth. The football team already has a major reputation problem. Those attending the games don't need to be mentioned in the same breath as the cretins in Oakland and Philadelphia.
Cardinals fans deserve better than that. At least most of them do.
Reach Bickley at [email protected] or (602) 444-8253.
http://www.azcentral.com/sports/columns/articles/0921bickley0921.html
The Arizona Republic
Sept. 21, 2005 12:00 AM
Pity all ticket-buying Cardinals fans, the ones stuck in NF-Hell.
The team has a 14 percent chance of making the playoffs. The stadium smells worse every game, a combination of sweat, stale beer and 47-year-old restrooms. Admission guarantees nothing but a red face.
After all, if the sun doesn't get you, the embarrassment will.
Surely, you will all have luxury suites in the afterlife for your loyalty and suffering. That is, except for the drunkards, morons and vulgarians that can make Sun Devil Stadium one of the worst experiences in the league.
So, to all of you idiots who threw water bottles on the field near the end of Sunday's bitter loss to the Rams: Please. Chill. Out. There are only six Sundays left in purgatory.
"It's normally a pretty good crowd," said Tempe's Jim Norris, a season ticket holder since 1988. "Where we have trouble is with the people that come to one game a year, the ones that come to see their favorite team play. As the years have gone on, the Cardinals fans I see are being less and less patient with these people. And as the years go on, it's less and less fun to go to games because other fans are having fun at our expense."
It all reached a boiling point on Sunday, when tempers were flaring long before kickoff. The NFL's new pat-down policy kept people in line and on the streets, even though turnstiles were empty. Thousands missed kickoff. With separate lines for different genders, Norris was in his seat 20 minutes before his wife finally showed up.
"It's an extra layer of security to enhance the comfort of the fans," NFL spokesman Greg Aiello said. "But it has to be implemented properly, and the teams are in charge of that."
Those efforts were clearly botched in Tempe, and making matters worse, the temperature was unusually warm. The game was another three-legged dog, and the ending was frighteningly familiar.
It all made for a volatile brew, and it eventually made a mockery of the NFL's new security measures, which were designed to keep large, improvised explosives from entering any of its 31 stadiums. Three hours after getting frisked outside the gates, enraged fans simply used large, improvised projectiles to litter the field, sending one photographer to the hospital.
Well before Sunday's game, it was sometimes hard to miss the dark side of Sun Devil Stadium. I know parents who have taken young kids to a Cardinals game, only to hear language that would make HBO squirm. Now, those parents are swearing that they'll never go back. I know females who attended a game and would feel more comfortable walking past a construction site. There is just something about the second-class feel of this NFL experience that can drag the game into the gutter.
Look, it's not good situation for anyone. The team can't get good, which means it can't get television slots on Sunday and Monday nights to combat the early-season heat. Arizona State would've upgraded its stadium years ago, except they're waiting until the Cardinals are gone for good. And given the early tone of the 2005 season, it seems to be a matter of playing out the string.
Until then, it wouldn't hurt to show a little class and a little couth. The football team already has a major reputation problem. Those attending the games don't need to be mentioned in the same breath as the cretins in Oakland and Philadelphia.
Cardinals fans deserve better than that. At least most of them do.
Reach Bickley at [email protected] or (602) 444-8253.
http://www.azcentral.com/sports/columns/articles/0921bickley0921.html