• You are currently viewing our forum as a guest, which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community, you will have access to additional post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), view blogs, respond to polls, upload content, and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free, so please join our community today! Just click here to register. You should turn your Ad Blocker off for this site or certain features may not work properly. If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact us by clicking here.

What does one need to do in order to NOT be considered a band wagon fan?

swordpath

New member
Joined
Oct 24, 2007
Messages
10,547
MBTI Type
ISTx
Enneagram
5w6
There are blatant and obvious band wagon fans, but then is there a fine line with straddlers? What constitutes a band wagon fan? How do you avoid being labeled as such? Do you have to watch so many regular season games or know so many player's names? How is this assessed?
 

INTPness

New member
Joined
Jan 22, 2009
Messages
2,157
MBTI Type
INTP
Enneagram
5w4
I have been a fan of these teams since I was about 4 years old: Lakers, Clippers, Dodgers, Angels, USC, UCLA. Formerly Raiders and Rams as well, but they both left L.A., so forget them! My loyalty is to the city of L.A. and the surrounding areas, not necessarily to teams who choose to leave. But, where I'm going with this is that I don't really have time to watch every single game. Because of work, I sometimes go long stretches where I can't watch my team(s) play. If I had time, I'd watch every single game. But, I don't so I have to just read the box score each morning on Yahoo Sports or espn.com to see if they won/lost and how the game unfolded. So, at any given time, I know what's happening with my teams - what place they are in, who is hurt, the fact that they haven't been playing up to their potential, etc. I keep up with them as I'm able to. Let's say I keep up with one of my teams "haphazardly" during the year, but then the playoffs start - and I get really interested. That can be seen as bandwagon behavior, but to me it's not because I've kept up with them all year, I just didn't have time to watch every single game on TV and sit on the couch with my foam finger cheering them on.

To avoid being a bandwagoner, do the following:
-know what's going on with your team. If you can't watch the game, then take 5 minutes the next morning and read the box score/summary in the paper or online. Watch those weekly 30 minute segments on cable TV like "Detroit Lions Insider" to see interviews, hear the coach talk, etc.
-I have a friend who says, "I LOVE the 49ers" and "I have to have my football. Without football, life just isn't the same." But, this person knows virtually nothing about the current team and says stuff like, "We have a big rivalry with the Chiefs and we always beat them." Um, no, I'm sorry to break it to you, but the 49ers and Chiefs do not have a rivalry. When the 49ers were 0-4 this year, this person argued with me that the 49ers had already won a game. Basically, if you don't know what you're talking about, don't act like you do.
-if you know "nothing" about the team all year and then you're super excited during the playoffs (like OMG, I hope they win soooo bad), you've officially "jumped on the bandwagon".
-know how the game works. Know the difference between a kickoff and a punt. Know what a screen play is. Know the difference between a pass interference call in college football vs. a pass interference call in the pro game. Know the difference between the overtime rules. Know all the positions on the field, etc. At least the basics. And that just comes by watching a few games and listening to the announcers. If you're at a noisy bar, you'll never learn what's really going on - the intracacies of the game.

Basically, just continue to gain knowledge about your team as time goes on and you'll become a fairly knowledgeable fan. You'll be able to read an article and know what is being said and you'll be able to talk to other sports fans and have some good insight into what is going on with the team. Know the team and what is going on; don't just show up during the playoffs and say, "Hey guys, isn't this exciting!?" Cuz yeah, it's exciting, but it was exciting for the past 5 months too.
 

Rail Tracer

Freaking Ratchet
Joined
Jun 29, 2010
Messages
3,031
Instinctual Variant
sx/so
Go crazy with the teams. Whatever that means to a person. I would say the difference between a bandwagon fan and a true fan is the amount of time and resources one person uses in terms of another.

Obvious differences?

1: Spending tickets to see the live game throughout the season...trying to get as close to the bottom seats as possible... even going to the away games just to see them play VS
2: Seeing the game on tv VS
3: Not seeing the game... but looking at the stats only (all the time.)

Clothing, I'm quite sure a real die-hard fan of a team will go crazy when their teams are playing.
1: Wearing the home clothing and the away clothing (caps, shirts... etc) depending on where a person's team is currently playing at. Going crazy with other accessories like posters ....blah blah blah. (EX:Cards...) VS
2: Just a couple of the teams clothing is fine VS
3: Nah.... just root for them as is, or root for them when they are in the world series (GO GIANTS! :D)

Obviously a bandwagon fan only know a few terms of the said sport. I'm quite sure a real die-hard fan will know the terms, the teams, the stats, and so on.

Of course... now I am just spewing the difference between a fanatic and a bandwagon fan.

A regular fan would at minimum:
Know the people in the team
Know what position people in the team play as
Know the terms
Do try to watch the team play
If living near his/her team...do try to go to a few of the games
Has been a fan of the team...for quite a while (and not just because the team is in the playoffs or going to the world series.)
 
Top