Sports are fun to play but they are also just as fun to watch thanks to a rich history of crazy fans and sports-specific or even team-specific traditions that have spanned across the decades. So while we fans aren’t scoring the game-winning goal, we still get heavily involved in the sport and in our teams through a number of ways. Below are just ten of the many traditions that have defined the “sport” of watching sports. By no means is this a comprehensive list – it was hard enough just narrowing down the list to ten even when I limited myself to only professional sports – so feel free to include any traditions, rituals and/or superstitions you want to share in the comments!
The abbreviations in the list are as follows: NHL (National Hockey League), NFL (National Football League – American football), MLB (Major League Baseball), NBA (National Basketball Association), FIFA (International Federation of Association Football)
The best way to show support for your favorite team is to proudly wear the team colors. Greater solidarity comes from tens of thousands of your fellow sports fanatics all wearing the same color. Its beginnings may have come from the NHL’s Calgary Flames during the 1986 Stanley Cup Finals. The Edmonton Oilers’s fans were in the midst of “Hat Trick Fever” as they tried to win their third consecutive championship. In response to Hat Trick Fever, Calgary promoted “C of Red” to encourage their fans to come dressed in entirely red. During next year’s first round playoffs, Calgary’s opponent responded with the “Winnipeg White Out”. Now it is extremely popular in US Universities like Penn State’s Code Blue and Virginia Tech’s Orange/Maroon Effect.
This is a fairly recent fixture in the FIFA scene even though the vuvuzela has been popular in South African games since the 1990s. The vuvuzela is a simply blow horn originally made of tin but mass-produced in plastic for games. Blowing through the mouth as you would a trumpet, the vuvuzela emits a loud monotone note similar to elephant trumpets. It’s stirred up some controversy because there are many who are trying to have them banned from the upcoming 2010 World Cup. The complains range from “too loud” to “not fit for a sports arena.” The vuvuzela supporters say that it doesn’t detract from the game anymore than anything else that fans have with them and that it is a strong part of the South African culture.
This popular hockey tradition may have gotten its inspiration from the sport of cricket. In cricket, a hat trick happens when a bowler dismisses three batsmen with consecutive deliveries. The custom crossed over to hockey with Ontario’s Biltmore Mad Hatters. When one of the players scored three goals in a game, the team owner Mr. Biltmore would present him with a new fedora. Many stories describe Mr. Biltmore throwing his top hat onto the ice to salute the player and soon enough, the fans also tossed their own hats onto the ice. After they are collected, the hats are either donated, thrown away or saved for a gigantic transparent case that showcases the franchise’s hat trick history.
During intermissions, many fans will race to the concession stand to grab some more food before the game resumes. In certain stadiums, the food does the running! The most famous is the Klement’s Sausage Race at Miller Park (home of the MLB’s Milwaukee Brewers). The tradition began in the early 90s as a computer animation race on the scoreboard but they made their first live appearance in 1994. At the bottom of the sixth inning of every Milwaukee Brewers home game, employees of Miller Park and a select few highly honored guest wieners don the seven foot three inch foam costumes and race from third base down to home plate and back up to first base. To date there are five sausages: Brett Wurst the bratwurst, Stosh the Polish sausage, Guido the Italian sausage, Frankie Furter the hot dog and Cinco the Chorizo. Bratwurst is currently the race leader with eighteen wins. The race gained fame outside of baseball in July 2003 when then-Pittsburgh Pirate Randall Simon used a bat to hit Guido (worn by employee Mandy Block) on the sausage’s head. Given where he hit Guido, the bat never came near Mandy Block’s head but since the costume is so top-heavy, Guido easy fell down and took Hot Dog down as well. Simon was arrested, given a fine and suspended by the MLB for three games. Despite reprimands by the authorities, some found the situation comical. Mandy Block asked for Simon’s autograph on the infamous bat and t-shirt companies made a tidy profit with shirts saying “Don’t whack our weiner!”
The Terrible Towel is as much a symbol of the NFL’s Pittsburgh Steelers as their three-star logo. Its creation comes from the mid-1970s after the Steelers won their first ever Super Bowl in 1974 and were strong contenders at the 1975 playoffs after winning twelve of fourteen games during the regular season. Around that time, general manager Ted Atkins, sales manager Larry Gerrett and broadcaster Myron Cope brainstormed ideas to market of the team’s success. The first idea was a mask of head coach Chuck Noll but was dismissed due to price issues. The next idea was the more cost-effective “Terrible Towel” because it was cheap, durable and easy to carry around. They had less than two weeks to promote the Terrible Towel so Myron Cope went on TV and radio telling people to bring, buy or dye a dish towel yellow, gold or black. By the next game, somewhere between 30,000-50,000 fans were spinning towels over their heads and the numbers have only grown since then. The following year, the Steeler’s franchise printed the official Terrible Towel image onto bright yellow towels and the tradition became official. All proceeds from Terrible Towel sales go to the Allegheny Valley School, which is “a residential and educational facility for children and adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities.” To date, the Terrible Towel has made over $2.5 million for the Allegheny Valley School.
At the old Yankee baseball Stadium, the fans in section 39 had a history of bad behavior. They heckled visiting teams and high school marching band students, they ignored the warnings of stadium ushers, and they even badgered fellow Yankee fans who weren’t part of their tight-knit group known as the Bleacher Creatures. As a result of the bad attitudes, section 39 lacked access to the rest of the stadium and beer sales were banned in just that area. However, negotiations between the Yankee organization and the Bleacher Creatures ensured that the group would get to sit together in section 203 of the new Yankee Stadium in exchange for a some changes to a few of their more belligerent Bleacher Creature traditions. Now seen more as ‘extremely loyal fans’ rather than a group of nasty hecklers, Yankee home games aren’t really complete until they deliver their Bleacher Roll Call. At the top of the first inning, “Bald Vinny” Milano shouts the name of a Yankee player and the entire section will chant that particular baseball player’s name until he recognizes the Bleacher Creatures with a wave or salute. They will go down lineup until every Yankee player is called.
This is a tradition that started with the NHL’s New York Islanders. From 1980 to 1983, the team won the championship and lifted Lord Stanley’s cup high above their whiskered faces. Since then, many teams and their fans have put away the razorblade for the duration of their playoff run. In addition to discussing team strategies and playoff series, fans also get into debates over which players can grow the best, worst or the most nonexistent playoff beard. Many teams will also sponsor Beard-A-Thons in which players and fans grow a playoff beard to fundraise money for various charities. The Playoff Beard tradition is strongest within hockey but it has found its way into other sports through players like the NFL’s Jake Plummer and tennis pro Björn Borg.
Fans love to show their support by wearing their team colors. Some may take it to the next level with brightly-colored facepaint or tattoos (whether temporary or not) but there are a select few superfans who are dressed so bizarrely that everyone takes notice. The NFL’s Washington Redskins have the Hogettes. When the group was formed, no one had even thought it would become an unofficial football mascot. As founder Michael Torbert describes it, he attended a Halloween Party at his grandmother’s retirement home dressed in her tea party finest and he was so popular that he and his friends thought they could take this act to local hospitals to cheer up sick children. As lifelong Redskins fans, they decided to go attend a game in their drag wear including pig snout masks referencing the offensive linesmen who were nicknamed the “Hogs.” The Hogettes have become a fixture within the Redskins community and through their fame, they have found greater exposure for their many charities. To date, the Hogettes have raised over $100 million for various charities like the Ronald McDonald House and the March of Dimes.
Heckling is one of the least favorable traditions in pro sports fandom but jeers and taunts are as common at games as the cheers and applause. No one has a heckling career as quite as prestigious as that of Robin Ficker (above), an ardent fan of the former Washington Bullets (now known as the NBA’s Washington Wizards). For twelve years, Robin Ficker held season tickets to Washington Bullets games that were directly behind the visiting team’s bench. He would taunt players through his megaphone. He made fun of coaches’ outfits. When the Chicago Bulls came to play, Ficker would read the sex passages of Bull’s Coach Phil Jackson’s 1975 autobiography “Maverick.” He’s had some supporters over the years, including basketball player Charles Barkley who had flown him to Phoenix when his team was in the finals against the Chicago Bulls. In 1997, the former Bullets moved to the MCI Center and Ficker decided not to renew his season tickets because the new seats were too far from the visitor’s bench. He faded from the sports world for focus on his political career but has recently taken to attending and heckling at wrestling matches at the University of Maryland.
A practice that remains strong for the Detroit Redwings of the NHL that (hopefully) won’t catch on with the other teams is the tossing of octopuses onto the rink. The origins of this tentacled tradition began in 1952 when fewer NHL teams meant that the road to the Stanley Cup only took eight playoff wins. To mark this occasion, brothers Pete and Jerry Cusimano threw the eight-legged creature onto the ice to represent the Redwing’s eight games against the Toronto Maple Leafs and the Montreal Canadiens. Since then, hundreds of octopuses have rained down onto the Redwing rink, including one tossed by Bob Dubisky and Larry Shotwell that weighed 50 lbs (22.68 kg). With every octopus purchased for the purpose of tossing, the Superior Fish Market gives out an “Octoquette” which is a pamphlet of recommended guidelines for octopus tossing, including boiling the octopus for half an hour (raw octopus tends to stick to the ice and leave a slimy residue when removed), launching them only after a Redwing goal as any other time may result in a Delay of Game penalty, and toss the octopus in a direction away from any players, officials and personnel.






























I am acting as a escourt and host to patrons of the SWC in Johannesburg . If you coming or know if anyone comning hit me up – i can show you around and get you ANYTHING….ANYTHING you want cept tickets .
GTT
Are you still looking in? If so, please let me know and keep loking.
Errrr … looking. I seem to have reached the point where I can’t even write a couple of simple sentences without a typo. Does that mean I’m doomed to end up a +textistic+?
@Casualreader [119]:
I agree 100% with your post. There is nothing more exciting than watching a game where both sides are fighting for the ball, both sides are busting their asses and both sides have plenty of attempts at goal (even if they dont all go in)… That is exactly why I hated the Inter strategy. They concentrated all of their players in the defensive line and had almost no goal attempts. It would have been exactly as exciting if they had all just stood shoulder to shoulder between the posts to prevent a goal. Yeah, it was effective but it wasn´t exactly exciting or “bonito”.
As to your “top dogs” argument, I also agree. Isnt this what happened to Real Madrid a few years ago? They had all the “stars” and still managed to lose every single competition they played in. Shoulda stayed that way!
@Maggot [74]: “item #3…the guy on the left. Methinks it’s not just his face and upper torso that is painted orange.”
–those crazy college kids…..it should clearly state — on the container of body paint —
‘caution: after application, the scratching of your nuts is not recommended’
of course, upon further examination of the picture, it appears as if the guy on the left does not have paint on his hands, but the guy on the right does….hmmmm
nah—i cant rip on the longhorns too much, since u.of alabama is my alma mater, and the tide spanked them in the national championship game in janurary…..
@ GTT, 124,
I fear we’re coming down a bit off the terraces and onto the pitch, but never mind, fans do that as a +tradition+ sometimes too, and streakers certainly do (no streaking, please, I’m British!).
Here’s a piece of utter sporting irony for you based on our last posts. Stop and consider that Italians are some of the most spontaneous, lively, outgoing, fun-loving, extroverted people in the world. And people from the dreary, colder northern lands are more reserved, dour, self-controlled, disciplined, etc. Then think of which country invented the perfect ‘killjoy’ soccer defence and compare it with the long history of the wonders of flamboyant, attacking Dutch football. Really wierd, eh?
@oliveralbq [125]: i cant rip on the longhorns too much, since u.of alabama is my alma mater, and the tide spanked them in the national championship game in janurary
So you aren’t a UNM Lobo, eh?
arent comment wars fun!?!?!?! XD
@bluesman87 [121]: That sounds Douchey anything within reason and law;)
@Maggot [127]: “So you aren’t a UNM Lobo, eh?”
–meh– i mean….i did go there for a year…i moved to albuquerque right before high school….and i do root for the lobos, but its more out of pity
i got most of my degrees in tuscaloosa
and here in the new orleans area, with all the coon ass l.s.u. people here in the mississippi and louisiana swamps, flying the crimson and white flag on my porch *****es everyone off
plus, they probably dont even know what lobos really are.
@bluesman87 [121]: “I am acting as a escourt and host to patrons of the SWC” ” i can show you around and get you ANYTHING….”
–a little cutting and pasting, allowing us to take your offer a little out of context…..
@bluesman87 [129]: “That sounds Douchey anything within reason and law;)”
–ooh, awwww.. now i know 3 new orleans girls who are going to be disappointed….
way to get their hopes up, blue :S :/
@oliveralbq [131]: hahaha nobody will know for sure what i can get till they get here
, im doing some things for friends comng over , thought maybe i could expand , but i bet its too late.
@bluesman87 [132]: “nobody will know for sure what i can get till they get here”
youre hysterical—-
blue87: welcome to south africa!
new orleans girl: can you show us ‘x’?
other new orleans girl: can you get us ‘y’?
blue87: that will be a resounding, maybe!!! come with me!
well played man
@oliveralbq [133]:Come on i’m not small time – not just a resounding maybe a definite and garuanteed maybe!
blue87: welcome to south africa!
new orleans girl: can you show us ‘x’?
can you get us ‘y’?
blue87: of course!just hop into the back of my rusty old van with blacked out windows.I also have free candy inside!
new orleans girl:Why are you dressed as a clown ?
blue87:oh….no reason…
Hahaha
@bluesman87 [134]: “Come on i’m not small time – not just a resounding maybe a definite and garuanteed maybe!”
—i stand corrected….i’ll send them down
“new orleans girl:Why are you dressed as a clown ?”
—if you dont wanna field this question, buy gold, purple and green plastic mardi gras beads, and put them around your neck — then offer them alcohol…
its still a soccer event. every sporting event ive been to here, from the new orleans hornets to the saints to the sugar bowls, to pga and usta (golf & tennis) events, the presence of mardi gras beads turns people’s brains into ‘party auto-pilot’ mode. and there isnt anything wrong with that, no matter how crazy of a tradition that is.
@oliveralbq [135]: What are mardi gras beads ?
@bluesman87 [136]: “What are mardi gras beads ?”
aw, ***** man….
uuhhh…forgot you were in south africa….
i *might* be able to explain this to you—-
its 3am i got a little time.
–in rio de janiero, quebec city, mobile al, biloxi ms, and new orleans the carnival season is richer and more extravagent than anywhere else.
–mardi gras references the period of time between the epiphany (in jan) and ash wednesday (dont ask me the significance of the catholic holidays — i dont have any idea)….all i know is that lent starts ash wednesday, and the day before that is ‘fat tuesday’. residents of these cities have made this grand tradition of going bat***** crazy the week leading up to lent, including closing all schools, courts, city hall, roads, throwing masquerade balls, and having massive parades.
–the parades — ok–people on the floats (which there are hundreds and hundreds of in appx 175 parades here on the gulf coast (mobile, biloxi, gulfport, new orleans)) they throw *****…little trinkets, doubloons, nerf footballs, moon pies (these marshmallow/banana/chocolate cookie things), and beads.
–the beads are little cheap plastic bead necklaces (probably cost about 5 cents each) that the float riders throw to the parade watchers, making it a more interactive type of parade, which is good since everyone is ***** drunk by 1 pm
someone somewhere (i certianly do not understand how this transformed) people decided to take the party to the streets of the french quarter (in new orleans) –pass road in biloxi and gulfport (my street!), streets of rio, etc.
many of the buildings have balconies, and the ones that dont, ive seen people put lawn chairs on their roofs — not real *****ing safe, but ..meh..who cares
meanwhile, the street itself is mobbed with people….the last time i went, you literally could not take three steps — wall to wall people, in and out of bars on bourbon st, and orleans ave….hell, everywhere in the french qtr.
let me back up
lining along the parade routes (which is a popular thing for families to do), the float riders mainly throw all the trinkets at children, as the children yell “throw me something, mister!” and often you will see kids (especially after the krewe of neptune parade, and the zulu parade) walking around with pillowcases full of crap, and 75 bead necklaces around their necks.
at some point this spilled over to the night parties
where requests of “throw me something mister!” was met with “show me your tits!”
which they did
no problem whatsoever
and if you dont want to take part then:
stay out of new orleans the day before ash wednesday period
flashing became more and more commonplace on fat tues, then spilled out to the rest of carnival season. at the same time, tits turned into tits asses whatever you have that is normally covered up, can get revealed for these little stupid ass mardi gras beads.
now, pretty much any weekend night in the french quarter, any new orleans saints home game, any holiday, if youre in the right place at the right time, you can see the exchange of girls flashing for mardi gras beads.
the city of new orleans does employee cops on horse back, because technically its indecent exposure, but you pretty much have to be stark naked, or throwing punches before the new orleans police will intervene (and quite frequently during carnival season, they dont even care about that — you just *cannot* ***** with the horses or youre going to jail). the rest of the year theyre a little stricter, but not much.
this used to be confined to a certian area, during a certain week, but now, alcohol + oppurtunity = tits
true, not every girl with beads has attained them the same way, there are many shy people that think wearing beads is fun or ‘new orleansy’ or whatever, but it has become a really weird phenomenon. seriously, no exaggeration, the last 5 times ive been to the superdome (4 saints games, and 1 alabama game), and a few recent basketball games across the street, it appears now almost entirely impossible to go the whole night without seeing the tits for beads exchange at least once.
*then…go to bourbon st. on the right block, at the right time of night, drunk girls will get into competitions (showing tits for longer, showing more than tits — (if its late enough, getting ‘friendly’ with each other) to get longer strands of beads, bigger beads, and unique strands, be they flashy or blinky or shaped like saints helmets, or whatever.
im no creole historian — i dont know the significance of some of the things that go on…
*****, im not even from here
but now, bluesman, you’ll have those damn beads around your neck and beers in your hand when the new orleans girls arrive in johannesburg, wont ya?
Thank god africa is FULL of *****ing beads!!!
@oliveralbq [137]: uuhhh…forgot you were in south africa….
i *might* be able to explain this to you—-
its 3am i got a little time.
Hahaha good job explaing too dude .
10 STORIES BEHIND AMERICAN SPORT TRADITIONS
That should be the title.
@thelord2000 [140]: “10 STORIES BEHIND AMERICAN SPORT TRADITIONS
That should be the title.”
–yeah….cause #9 happens in america all the time…..
–so, the title of this list should be:
—-”9 stories about american sport traditions, and 1 story about south african sport traditions”
no…sorry….i simply have to believe the stupid meat races was put there against the list authors will, and the haka should appear
–so, the title of this list should be:
—-”8 good stories about amer. sport tradition, 1 weak story about american sport tradition, and 1 story about south african sport tradition, and one new zeland tradition that got shafted by accident”
oh oh… wait i think 3 of the hockey traditions actually started in canada or the olympics….
–so the title of this list should be:
—-5 stories about american sport tradition, 1 bad one, 1 new zeland one, a few that were attributed to america but which were really canadian, and one haka”
***** thats too long
wait…..i got it
the title of this list should be:
“10 stories behind crazy sport traditions”
and we can also create a list forum and have peeople
leave comments about one that didnt appear, or anecdotal stories.
and we can perpetuate this list for 3 years, and even pen a few books
im glad i thought of that
jafe—feel free to use this idea-(retroactive to july03, 2007)
@ oliveralbq, 141,
Hi again,
Intention: Couldn’t be more friendly. I just want to:
1) Apologise for never having straightened out previous silly spider spat (I like that one – Silly Spider Spat!) -based on total but sincere misunderstanding of local idioms. I could explain why and how it happened, how had you phrased it slightly in differently in (for me) recognisable Americana, I’d have picked up on the tone and intention. But why waste valuable time and screen-space? You betcha we’ve both got better fish to fry.
Also in my first post, talking about crossing swords, I unfortunately confused you with another poster, and forgot you were friendly Keith. Sorry.
2) Point out +Cas’s Law of Diminishing LV Returns+, colloquially known as +typing to thin air+!
LV lists have their nearest equivalent in daily papers. With the difference that the more arcane or specialised the topic, the less its active life-span and posting total. More controversial and universal ones (+Your view+ types) often continue longer, akin to reference journals, attract new posters, and may even pile up comments into the 000s. But they are very few. The further down lists get buried, the less chance they are still +alive+. If they are, the more they tend to diverge off-topic, espcially into personal vendettas or friendship convos. I’d guess the average active life-span of a list is 1-2 weeks at the outside, and that may be a gross overestimate (i.e., it’s subject to a doctorate stat. research *****ysis). The same devoted inchworm could probably draw up an average daily response graph with a massive first day high, tapering rapidly away. Sometimes a discrete, disjunct comment is added long after the main body has ceased to function. Very occasionally that may even be taken up by another +lone poster+. I’ve often come late to a topic, been stirred into a reply or adding something I thought might interest, then looked in vain for a reaction for days, weeks, months afterwards. ***** all. Mine is still stuck embarrassingly there on the end like a spare prick at a wedding. I don’t know whether all this has to do with list overloads, short internet e-attention spans, the diverse overall range of LV interests, or what. Personally I think your idea of developed lists is great. It’s right up my street. But it already happens haphazard within LV bounds (i.e. over the first day or so), and often with added fire and brimstone! That’s the nature of the beast.
@Fluffhead234508 [93]: Order number 71109 cheers mate!@Fluffhead234508 [93]: erm, you don’t have a single organisation for sports that are the largest in the world you Dufus, world series indeed.
@Casualreader [142]: “I unfortunately confused you with another poster, and forgot you were friendly Keith. Sorry.”
–
dont let it happen again
haha kidding kidding
–the phenomenon of diminishing traffic among lv lists is actually quite interesting……more interesting: that the outliers (and i mean outliers with a capital ‘o’) tend to be so far outside the standard deviation curve that a closer examination is needed into the cause/effect relationship.
this appears to be more closely related to the topic(s) of discussion among the commentors, rather than simply the content of the list.
of course, there are examples where this is not the case, such as the blossoming of the comment section corresponding with the list on warriors from last week. there are like 125 comments or so that say extremely similar things
whats more: i believe if i sat and thought about this, i could find a way to mathematically quantify at least some of the ideas.
this is something i have thought about before, but until now, never *actually* intended to assign variables, risk factors, and other empirical data to *****ytical matricies. i just may try this….
the descriptive hypothesis regarding list life logic (!!!) you proposed is quite interesting. equally interesting to me, is — as you move away from the centre, you notice a couple patterns. almost inevitably, one will be that the side which has more factors will be replete with said factors residing closer to the mean. conversly, the side which has fewer, will have more further away from the mean. the clustering of incidences is nothing new, nor unexpected. its the outliers that reside so far away from the mean which spark an interest to me. why are they *that* obtuse….should the fact that they are so offset from the norm lead to an investigation of possible obfuscation of the mitigating factors behind their presence far away from the mean?
i think i can figure this out (not literally figure out the problem, but rather figure out a way to enlighten us a touch)
yep–i will do that — as will i make some comment on you post regarding justice,,…which is on another thread. just so happens i spent 5 semesters in independant readings classes pouring over the onset of deviant behaviour, its consequences in society, and where/how our preconcieved notion of justice fits in to all of this: including, but not limited to — using a model of justice as a deterrent, and as a social example of ‘how not to act’ mfor lack of a better phrase. if im not mistaken, you wrote about this exact thing about 3 days ago….
when i have time to look for it, i will add on
cheers
Great list, but the "Vuvuzela" story is a total hoax, I´ve seen those exact horns in Mexican football matches for at least 30 years.
I guess that´s what happen in a country with no football history or background, they make up some.
things as the hat-trick and c of red were already seen in football long before hockey or american football. ***** list
These traditions are pretty cool. They do provide an encouraging support to the hard working players in the court or field. It just makes sense here, that without the fans and these traditions, any sport event wouldn't be succesful.
Be a Fan
I love the representation for NHL hockey. Props.
Didn’t say TOP 10…Didn’t say ONLY 10…Didn’t even say anything but 10. Feel free to submit ANOTHER 10, STILL MORE, etc., but kwitcher*****en. Just don’t call it football traditions and have nothing but soccer on your list. Also, my car has neither a boot or a bonnet, and when it has a flat it doesn’t pay rent.
@scratch that’s *****ing hilarious and too true.
And in terms of traditions. I’d love to know why no one ever wants to touch the prince of wales cup.
Furthermore if listverse has taught me anything it’s that every list can be expanded upon (ie “another 10 sports traditions”) STOP *****ING
I feel this is one of the such a lot vital info for me. And i’m glad reading your article. But wanna statement on few common issues, The site style is great, the articles is truly nice : D. Excellent task, cheers
I have been surfing on-line greater than three hours as of late, but I by no means found any fascinating article like yours. It’s lovely worth sufficient for me. In my view, if all site owners and bloggers made excellent content as you did, the internet will likely be a lot more helpful than ever before.