TeamoftheCentury":2lsmv0ns said:
I don't quite get this. I know people have "2nd" favorite teams and all that. I've tried, at times. I can root for teams when the Seahawks are not playing, but not with the passion I have for my team.
The team is bigger than any one guy. Whether you don't like the Owner, GM, any of the coaches, a certain player... we all perhaps have that in common at times. But, if it's your team... it's your team. Meaning, you couldn't quit them if you tried. (I know you're calling it a "vacation" - lol - which is perhaps somewhat comprehensible.) But, if you can root for another team on what you're calling a vacation, I sort of wonder how you define being a fan. (I know there's various opinions on all this even here on this board.)
Could pick any online definition of a fan.
A fan, or fanatic, sometimes also called aficionado or supporter, is a person who is enthusiastically devoted to something or somebody, such as a band, a sports team, a genre, a book, a movie or an entertainer. Collectively, the fans of a particular object or person constitute its fanbase or fandom.
Maybe there should be a "loyal" fan definition? The key term seems to be "devoted" - yeah, devoted
until....
I really mean no disrespect here to you, Popeye. I'm just having more of an issue with the principle of the thing, while understanding your disgust.
I guess there's no standard definition of a fan. But, in my book... are you a 49ers fan or not? If so, the Chip Kelly years should not be enough to ruin that. Coaches and players come and go (except those who are immortalized), but fans are the constant.

unno:
I've thought about loyalty to teams throughout the years and in spite of front office failure to produce winners and I've arrived at this conclusion:
If a team spends a decade or more languishing and losing with little prospective improvement because of the ownership itself, there is not a lot of emotional payoff for that loyalty and the loyalty is not justified or rewarded by the team, only other fans. I think in the case of teams like the Browns, Lions, Jacksonville, etc etc you'd have to be a masochist and revel in the suckage to remain loyal. Riding through thick and thin is only appreciated by other people who made the same choice as you and you have to be outwardly loyal to receive that emotional validation.
Secondly, I totally believe in being a fan of team narrative. There is something beyond just winning the SB for Seahawks fans - the journey from our 2005 SB appearance to almost going off the cliff to the major changes in the FO and personnel that lead to our SB win...not to mention the in game heroics on our way there - Beastquake, Sherman's pick 6 of Schaub, The Tampa Bay comeback, The NFCCG against the Niners, the NFCCG against the Packers, the most emotionally devestating SB loss ever. These events are not matched in magnitude by many competitive teams like the Bengals, but they're completely unfathomable to the likes of Lions or Browns fans. In the case of the Niners, the narrative is a dark comedy of errors. I think sometimes it's okay to put a book down if the story goes off the rails and find a new one to read.
Third, when adversity sets in, whoever is left might not be fans you want to associate with. If I were a Niners fan now I wouldn't be having fun talking with other Niners fans over the team because it's such a mess. The only unifying thought is "Screw Jed York". I think the one aspect of a team on the slide that is tough to stomach is the the constant "Good riddance, we didn't need them anyway". It's like being a spurned lover and I just wouldn't find any joy being around a bunch of spurned lovers.
Fourth, you really need to evaluate why you're a fan in the first place. What do you get out of dedicating 3-4 hours of your time to following the game and the countless hours jawboning about it? For me, being a Seahawks fan isn't just about the team itself and the players and coaches, it's about seeing the city rally around the team and the collective excitement and high fives. It's about getting together with friends and family and sharing the heights of winning and the disappointment of loss. There's also a fundamental appreciation of the strategic elements and breaking those down but that's team agnostic. I watched way more Eagles football than I care to admit because I was fascinated by Chip Kelly systematically dismantling the team. I also watched more Chiefs games than I expected because I wanted to see what an inferior Seahawks team looked like.
Fifth, The more transparent it becomes that this is a business with profit not being influenced by winning to any appreciable degree, it lessens the hope you have for the future of the team. Perennial bottom feeders don't have any internal incentive to improve and it's obvious. I'm more loyal to my high school's and college's teams (okay, I went to a small liberal arts college that had ultimate frisbee) than I am to professional teams because there is way more alignment between the team and the fan in goals - emotional payoff of victory.
My background is I grew up in the Bay Area for the formative years of my life, watched and rooted for the Niners up until I moved to Seattle at 19. For a few years my life was so topsy turvy that I didn't really follow the NFL or Niners. Then when I met my wife, a local, there was no looking back, I was in for the Seahawks. And one of the reasons is it was no fun being an outsider who couldn't share in the happiness of their rise - I am constantly an antagonist in almost every other aspect my life and for once it was a lot more fun being part of the group than not and the downside was non existent - The Niners were still crappy and my childhood happiness were firmly in the fond and distant memories part of my brain, and I had no Niners fans to chide me for disloyalty. Also, marriage is more important than fandom and we look great together in our robber baron pete t shirts
I think the part of why I don't see a point to unwavering loyalty is I've never suffered for having flexible loyalty. Nay, I've been rewarded a ton for it. And when the stakes are a game, it's not like it a huge reflection on my character either.