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mesaSteeler
04-24-2008, 12:05 AM
The State of Sports in Charlotte
http://bleacherreport.com/articles/19283-The-State-of-Sports-in-Charlotte#
by Michael Felder (Member)

This article has not been edited yet.
Carolina Panthers, Charlotte Bobcats, Editorial, Editorial

I've lived in Charlotte for over 15 years. I went to elementary, middle, and high school here, so basically, I'm the next best thing to a person born in Charlotte. I love this city, I love the people here, and hell, I don't even really mind the transplants, as long as they don't try to tell me how they did things wherever the hell they're from.

Charlotte is a great place to live, a great place to raise kids and have a family, and a great place to work. Charlotte is not a great sports town. There are three reasons for this, and the blame falls not only on the shoulders of the fans, but on the teams in the region.

The fans in the region are guilty on two fronts.

First, there is a large portion of the fanbase that is completely ignorant. These fans don't understand the inner-workings of a championship-caliber program. Generally speaking, they tend to be fans that are new to the NFL who just started following professional football with the Panthers. They are the fans that want more offense, think that defensive football is boring, and truly buy into the idea that the more you score, the more you win.

This segment of fans is one that I find highly annoying, as their ignorance only manifests itself as a voice talking loudly, but saying nothing. While you don't have to have played football to understand it, you do have to have an appreciation for the intricacies of the game to truly comprehend the formula for winning in the NFL.

A prime example of this is when owner Jerry Richardson was quoted as saying he, "would like for the Carolina Panthers and our team, and our work, and the way we operate our team to emulate the Pittsburgh Steelers."

Fans called radio stations, sent emails and wrote the paper complaining that this was a stupid decision. That they didn't want the team to emulate the Steelers, the most stable, well-run franchise in pro sports. Instead, fans wanted Richardson to emulate the Patriots.

"Why can't we be like the Patriots?" was the cry. A team, up until 2001, no one outside of New England could care less about. This tier of fans doesn't understand or appreciate the impact that front-office stability and a unified philosophy has on the franchise.

In the last 30+ years, the Steelers have gone through the same amount of head coaches as the Panthers have gone through in 12. The new football fan doesn't grasp the concept that defense is the way to build a team, and a power running game based on a strong offensive line creates more wins than any flash in the pan offensive scheme.

The second type of fan that is detrimental to the Charlotte landscape is the transplant. A large percentage of Charlotteans aren't from Charlotte at all, they're from Washington DC, New York, New Jersey, and Ohio. These fans already have their own teams, and they aren't changing. This is one reason that Panther's fans are uneducated concerning the game, as they were fans that didn't watch the NFL until 1996.

The fans that did watch the NFL still watch and still root for their respective teams. At Bank of America Stadium, it isn't uncommon for opposing teams' fans to out number the Panther faithful, especially if the Redskins, Steelers, or Cowboys come to town. This is truly a hindrance, as the Panthers don't truly make inroads into the community as long as the city's residents continue to cling to their old teams. I'm even guilty of this, as my family are Steelers fans, and I fully plan on raising my future children to love the black, gold, and the Terrible Towel.

With that being said, it's tough but true that it will take quite sometime for fans and their children to assimilate to the Panthers truly being "THE TEAM" in Charlotte.

The teams in Charlotte don't help themselves out in the department of increasing fanhood. While the Panthers have had three relatively successful seasons out of 12, they aren't a perennial power in the NFC, let alone the NFL. The Bobcats are even worse, as they are set for their fourth season of sitting home in the summer for the playoffs.

The NFL came into Charlotte in 1995, and was welcomed into the city with open arms. The Richardsons have, for the most part, treated fans right, and they have been endeared to the people of Charlotte. There are several aspects of the Panthers that have created a less than stellar situation for them in the city.

One is the stadium situation, in which the game-time atmosphere is one of the worst in the NFL. By creating a "high-class" atmosphere, the Richardsons have truly handcuffed the die-hard fan. There are no shirt-off, body-painting football fanatics in Charlotte.

Even if there were, the stadium authorities would ask them to put a shirt on. Sign size is controlled, and massive alcohol consumption isn't a problem. Overall, coming to Charlotte to play is a treat for opposing teams. There is no atmosphere in BOA, unless the other team brings their own, as is the case when the Panthers play teams with rowdy followers.

On the field, the Panthers have their own problems. Multiple times they've fallen to fan pressure to select the "vogue" pick, instead of fitting players into the John-Fox system. Deangelo Williams and Thomas Davis are just two first-round examples in the last couple years that don't fit into the power running and maintain a strong defensive philosophy.

However, fans wanted "an explosive" running back and a "play-maker" on defense. Hurney and Fox needed to stick to their system, a power-running back to replace Stephen Davis, a strong outside-linebacker to plug into the system. Not projects that may or may not materialize. Don't try to make an extraordinary pick when an ordinary one will do.

While the idea that the Panthers' casual fans don't grasp the idea of patience and stability being the keys to success, they do understand winning. In the 2002-2003 season, the Panthers played stout defense and ran the ball well, and fans went to the game. Scoring doesn't keep fans in seats, winning does.

The Bobcats are another story entirely, as they entered the city already despised by a large contingent of potential fans. The arena deal forced through the city, and the way George Shinn treated the city in moving the Hornets and the "thuggish" mentality of the NBA in the early 21st century all turned fans off. The product was incredibly poor, as the Bobcats didn't have any marquee players to draw fans.

To add insult to injury, the prices for Bobcats tickets, and the season ticket policies, are horribly managed. As an upstart and an underdog within the community, the Bobcats need to appeal to the masses, and work overtime to build quality public-relations within the area. Low ticket prices, gameday give aways, and strong consumer-relations would be a major step towards righting the Bobcats' ship.

The other step would be to put a successful product on the floor. Instead of drafting players that will only serve to initially get players to the stadium (Sean May, Raymond Felton, Adam Morrison), the Bobcats need to draft players that will fit into their system.

Herein lies the problem. The Bobcats have no system, no identity as a team. Watching them play is just watching a bunch of guys out there shooting around, sometimes running plays, sometimes just winging it. They need stability and an identity to build success in a horrid eastern-conference.

The last major player in Charlotte's ultimate suckage as a sports town is the region itself. In the south, there aren't a lot of pro sports. Sure, Atlanta has the Hawks (they suck too, almost as bad as the Bobcats) and the Falcons (ew), and Charlotte has the Panthers and the Bobcats, but overall, the south is very new to professional sports.

Down here, fans cling to their college sports; Sunday is nice, but Saturday is king. Fans here get rowdy on Saturday, and spend Sunday rehashing and recovering while the NFL game is on the tube. It is an even worse situation for basketball, as the NBA isn't even on the radar of a large portion of college basketball fans. They don't love good basketball and talented players, they like the ambiance of the college game.

Sabin
04-24-2008, 12:18 AM
The last major player in Charlotte's ultimate suckage as a sports town is the region itself.


Sounds like somebody got stuck emulating the Cleveland Browns.

CAH
04-24-2008, 01:25 AM
Charlotte has good college football fans but they'll come around to the NFL sooner than you think. I noticed quite a few fans when the Panthers were in the playoffs so another year like that will do wonders for gaining fans.

Super Dave
04-24-2008, 07:29 AM
That dude has no idea what he is talking about.

Their are not a bunch of DC transplants in the area, the reason the Skins have a large following is because they were shown on TV every week before the Panthers came to town, they were our regional feed.

And Jerry Richardson did indeed say that about the Steelers, but he said it when they were awarded the team, before Kraft even bought the Pats.

Achie D
04-24-2008, 07:55 AM
I live near Charlotte. There are as many cars with Steeler stuff on them as Panther stuff. And when the Steelers play here its a home game. Its a sight to behold.

TMC
04-24-2008, 08:16 AM
I live in South Carolina. No way in hell am I walking away from the Steelers for the Panthers. I like the Panthers, hope they do well, glad to have them locally, but I don't fuck around on my wife OR my team.

cutty
04-24-2008, 09:33 AM
It is only natural for someone like myself to be born/raised a steeler fan and will die a steeler fan. The panthers have been around for 13 seasons, they are going to need to be around for another 25-30 years so the next generations can be born/raised panther fans. You do not get the following of true fans like the steelers/cowboys/redskins/giants in the first 13 years of existance. It takes time.

As far as the Bobcats are concerned, I totally disagree with his opinion. I am a season ticket holder of the Bobcats, they would have been in the play-offs this year if it were not for losing 2 of their best young players to season ending surgeries before the first game. They have made a few mistakes, but they are correcting them as well. They just signed a tv contract that will bring the games to local tv instead of a station that only a few houses could pick up.

I was born & raised in Waynesburg, about 50 miles south of Pittsburgh, and have lived in Charlotte for 23 years. When the steelers come to town, I am always there with my steeler colors on. I follow the panthers as my NFC team, but constantly turn down panther tickets so I can stay at home to watch my steelers on my plasma.

JohnnyO
04-24-2008, 10:43 AM
I live near Charlotte. There are as many cars with Steeler stuff on them as Panther stuff. And when the Steelers play here its a home game. Its a sight to behold.
Sure, because USAirways transferred A LOT of Pittsburgh employees to Charlotte and several thousand others left here to go there to find work.

bill s55
04-24-2008, 11:31 AM
I lived in South Carolina for years. Part of the problem is that before the Panthers got there most of the football fans had no choice to be either Falcon fans or Redskin fans. Some of those diehard fans won't give up on their teams. Charlotte started exploding in growth over the last decade. They are starting to get a fanbase it just takes time.

a1aparrot
04-24-2008, 01:15 PM
That dude has no idea what he is talking about.

Their are not a bunch of DC transplants in the area, the reason the Skins have a large following is because they were shown on TV every week before the Panthers came to town, they were our regional feed.

And Jerry Richardson did indeed say that about the Steelers, but he said it when they were awarded the team, before Kraft even bought the Pats.

Yup absolutely true. The locals here in Columbia SC that are NFL fans are either transplants that kept their old team, or the locals that grew up watching the Redskins on TV. But, college football is king here and I don't see it changing.