Before I get started, I would like to invite everyone reading this to follow me on twitter @scashhomey.
As a person that was born and raised in Atlanta GA, I can say first-hand how great of a city that it is. I love it so much that I chose to attend college and live my adult life here. Honestly, I have never seriously entertained the thought of living anywhere else. Don’t get me wrong, I love to visit other places, but I definitely prefer to call the ATL home. This is a city with great weather, beautiful people, wonderful restaurants, lively night-life, and great venues to see live theatre and music. Why wouldn’t everyone want to live here? This is one of the few cities in America with big-city amenities, and a slow laid back life-style. As a matter of fact, I have met quite a few people who visited in the mid 90’s for a certain “black college festival,” and never left. You know who you are, and you are probably reading this with a reminiscent smile on your face.
Although I love so many things about my city, there is one thing that I absolutely hate about Atlanta. That is the fact that we absolutely suck as a sports town. Our teams epitomize mediocrity and will never be serious contenders for championships, and the fans here are primarily fair weathered who only root for the teams in the playoffs and only attend games when stars from other teams are on the schedule. It’s bad enough when the Hawks run ticket ads advertising the likes of Kobe Bryant and LeBron James, but it’s even worse when party promoters are even throwing parties after those games “hosted by” stars from other teams. I guarantee you that Joe Johnson and Josh Smith aren’t hosting any parties in South Beach, and that they aren’t on the cover of the LA Times when the Hawks play the Lakers. This is despicable and it all stems from a city-wide acceptance for mediocrity. I for one am sick of it, and will not accept it any longer.
Atlanta is home to the Falcons (have not had a lot of success in their history, but are really trying these days), the Braves (mediocre and perfectly happy being that way), the Hawks (good enough to make the playoffs, but will never get out of the second round, and that’s OK with them), Georgia Tech (football will forever be average and the basketball team has a coach they can’t/won’t get rid of), and the Thrashers (its hockey, so I don’t care).
Georgia Tech is in a precarious situation. Their football team will never win big on a consistent basis simply because of the location of the school. Sure they may win their division within the ACC every 5 years or so and may even win the ACC Championship once every 10 years, but they will never have any sustainable success. That is because in a sport that is so heavily reliant on recruiting, they are in the worst possible location. They will never be able to out-recruit the University of Georgia, and they will also lose players that they covet to the likes of Florida State, Florida, Alabama, Auburn, Tennessee, and LSU. They don’t have the deep pockets needed to land top recruits who share a financial advisor with Cam Newton, and their academic standards are too high to admit the type of marginal students that SEC football has been built upon. Therefore they will never be big winners, although it is really no fault of their own. The geographic gods simply did not smile upon them.
Before I get to the basketball team, I must first ask, "Why is Paul Hewitt still the coach?" He has done absolutely nothing since the last 2003-2004 season and has missed the NCAA tournament in 6 of his 11 seasons at Tech (I am making the safe assumption that he will miss the tourney this year as well). One thing that Hewitt has proven is that he knows how to recruit the occasional no impact one-and-done player that will be a lottery pick in the NBA. Although these players don’t make impact while at Tech, they blossom into NBA stars (i.e. Chris Bosh and Derrick Favors in a couple of years). That being said, his coaching leaves a lot to be desired. He runs a run of the mill ACC team that is nothing special and has been playing in a virtually empty gym for the last two years. I always thought that Tech was a sleeping giant in the ACC, waiting to emerge and regain the status that is once enjoyed among the league’s elite. However, Hewitt has put the program into a deep hibernation that looks like it will be impossible to recover from all while happily collecting his $1 million plus annual salary.
The Braves are a franchise with a self-imposed budget in a sport in which the teams that spend the most usually win. Baseball is a sport where you really can buy a championship. Of all of the major sports, chemistry and teamwork matters least in baseball, which is why an owner can simply buy the best players he can find and they can win. The Braves are run by a faceless corporation as an investment property that they expect to return a designated annual return on their investment. This means that winning is not the priority, which begs me to ask why they won’t simply sell the team to someone who actually wants to own a baseball team and will not treat it as simply a line item on a balance sheet. The Braves in recent years have managed to have just enough talent to win the Wild Card and get slaughtered in the first round, and my feeling is that they have that as a stated goal again this year. I wouldn’t be surprised if new manager Fredi Gonzalez stands in front of the team after clinching the NL Wild Card this season and simply says, “Good job guys, mission accomplished. No go ahead and book your vacations to start after game three of this first round series.” Then all of the guys will cheer and pat themselves on the back, feeling a sense of accomplishment.
The Falcons are trying their best to build a winner and fight for respect in the NFL. Arthur Blank has hired a brilliant GM, who has in-turn hired a good head coach and drafted a quarterback that has been solid and has a promising future. That being said, they are still not a well respected franchise in the NFL. Although they went 13 – 3 last season and were the #1 seed going into the NFC playoffs, did anyone really expect them to make the Super Bowl? This is a solid team that is being built the right way, but they will never be fully embraced by this city for one simple reason. They lack a super-star. When they win, they will be embraced by a ton of bandwagon fans, but they won’t develop a true and loyal fan base in this city because they lack the superstar player. The Falcons were tremendously popular when they had Michael Vick, because he was a transcendent star. He is now gone, and the team will never be embraced the same way again. That is largely because this is a terrible sports town. In Atlanta, people will go to the games if it is considered the “it” thing to do, or if it is the place where they can see and be seen. Unfortunately the Georgia Dome is not that place.
The Hawks have frustrated me to no end. This is the only team in the city that I considered myself a true fan of. I watched them grow from nothing to the peaks of mediocrity. The problem is that once they got to mediocrity they forgot to look up and see if there existed anything beyond that. Until this year, I watched about 75 Hawks games per season. Although they were bad in the beginning, it was fun watching a young and exciting team develop. I didn’t care if they got their brains bashed in each night, I simply enjoyed watching the process and I felt as though I was in on the ground floor of something special. Well, I was wrong. What this team was building towards was nothing special at all. Instead of a team developing into a serious championship contender, we have a team that is good enough to be the fourth or fifth best team in their conference, and who is yet to win a second round playoff game. I didn’t say series, I said GAME! This year, I have probably watched about 10 Hawks games in their entirety. Not because I don’t want them to do well or because I don’t feel like they will win the championship (I didn’t expect them to win it this year or anytime soon for that matter), it’s just that I have seen this movie before. It is a very frustrating feeling to watch other teams make moves to get better, while your favorite team simply stays the same. When Miami signed LeBron James and Chris Bosh, we countered by overpaying Joe Johnson and signing Josh Powell. When the Knicks traded for Carmelo Anthony, we traded for Kirk Henrik. When Boston deepened their bench by trading for Jeff Green and signing Troy Murphy, we get Hilton Armstrong. Is anyone noticing a trend here? I am fan of teams making an effort, but unfortunately I live in a city where none of the teams (except the Falcons of late) are making a legitimate effort.
The bottom line is that I love my city, and I wouldn’t want to live anywhere else (unless I was being paid an obscene amount of money). But sometimes the sports fan in me wishes that he could live in Boston where the Celtics, Red Sox, and Patriots start each season with the goal of winning a championship and spend each off-season figuring out a way to reach that goal. Maybe that part of me would like to live in Chicago where the Bulls seem to be building something special and the Bears are trying their hardest to become winners again. Or is the place to be now New York, where the Yankees are well, the Yankees and the Knicks are in the midst of building a serious championship contender. Truth be told, I don’t want the sports fan in me to leave my city. I would rather the teams in my city take their cue from these other cities and work to satisfy the sports fan within me and every other real sports fan in Atlanta.
Once again, be sure to follow me on twitter @scashhomey.
3 comments:
Northside Marty here bringing that Northside aka Buckhead & Sandy Springs & Zone 2 (not the Sandy Springs from the movie ATL...the less ritzy side of Sandy Springs) flavor to this topic.
What is this "black college festival" you speak of? J/K. I went one year (by accident).
First, everyone should also read this article by Bark Madley in the AJC covering a similar topic. One title in 149 seasons: http://blogs.ajc.com/mark-bradley-blog/2011/01/21/atlantas-sad-sports-history-one-lousy-title-in-148-pro-seasons/
1) Atlanta Fans - I no longer have this argument. People who were born here are great fans of the ATL teams, except for Carlos. People who transplanted (50%+ of the population) suck and should move back from wherever they came from. End of story. I'm done.
2) Tech - I went there so I'm typing thru gold colored glasses. I actually see the location (ATL) as a benefit. This is the only reason we get recruits at all. Why would you want to go to school with hard academics and no chicks? You wouldn't, except that ATL is the 2nd best city in the South. Hewitt needs to go, but he has kick ace lawyers that got him an amazing lifetime contract. Good for him. Our football team? I expect to win the ACC once every 8 years, not 10. Fun fact - There are more UGA alumni in ATL than there are Tech alumni alive.
Braves - I hated them for awhile after they lost the NLCS to the Marlins and looked like they didn't care. I like them now. They finally have a real manager and bright future with some good young pitchers, especially Teheran. I can't wait for that guy to make the bigs.
Falcons - That's my squad! They could go 0-16 for the next 5 years and personally write me a letter telling me to eff off and I'd still go to every game.
Hawks - Who cares? Watching the NBA is like staring at the sun. Or watching paint dry. Take your pick.
I'm out like the trash on Thursday.
If we were able to have a broadcast of this disucussion on a local Atlanta network, it would still go unwatched (similar to the Hawks debacle that is currently unfolding). I began my wayward journey as a Hawks fan back in 1989. Unlike, you I fall into that fair weathered category that you spoke of. I seized the moment 2 years ago as the Hawks were budding into an actual team.
This is evident of the Spud Webb and Dominique Wilkins posters that once hung from my bedroom walls (of course, strategically lower than the Michael Jordan poster of MJ gliding from the free throw line). I abandoned the Hawks after they traded our "Rocky Balboa" for Mike Tyson Punch Out's "Glass Joe". The parallel is relevant because Rocky Balboa was the fictitional face of Philadelphia; such was the same for Dominique! However, after that ugly divorce took place, I meandered over to the cunning display of basketball holiness while watching Michael Jordan forge his Jumpman image in contention with Jerry West's current NBA logo form.
Since MJ retired his gym shorts, I wandered in the forrest for forty years in search of a reason to rekindle any concern for NBA basketball. 2004 marked the year that my interest towards the Hawks would be renewed; we drafted (noticed how I wrote "we"...lol) Josh Smith. In my personal opinion, Josh was the rebirth of Dominique. It appeared as if the Hawks were waiting for roughly 20 years to pass by before this redemptive moment. I quickly hopped back into the Hawks bandwagon after a few more relevant acquisitions (Marvin Williams in 2005, Al Horford in 2007, etc, etc, etc.
At this juncture I said to myself, "the Hawks are getting it together"! It finally seemed as if the Hawks Management finally fired the same rehabilitation staff of Lindsey Lohan's and quit smoking crack after more than a decade of endulging in a bad crack habit. UNFORTUNATELY, that was all do to the expense of my false perception of what was really going on. The Hawks management made JUST ENOUGH moves to keep the team in Atlanta, keep the team competitive enough to entertain the "few" (not to be confused with "true") fan base, and host an All-Star game that would pay off the new arena and bring money to a city that has been struggling to pay its police officers and other first responders. The future doesn't look bright for now. I agree we have failed to acquire that big name player that will put arses in the seats. I guess when Chris Paul becomes a free agent this off-season, we'll once again watch the Ferrari zoom around the track, and wait to purchase for the next Herbie the Love Bug/Beetle!!!
As for the Braves, they appear to have gone through the motions for making SOME moves. I agree that the spoils go to the teams with unlimited amounts of capital to spend on players. In baseball, cash is indeed king!
The Falcons are almost there. Unfortunately, the next Michael Vick is not entering the 2011 Draft this year. Michael Vick (as a rookie) was one of the players that had the celebrity effect before he came to the city. He was a god at Virginia Tech! It's almost a forgone conclusion that such a big name star will not be drafted any time soon because that caliber of a player comes once every decade....i.e. Deion Sanders in the 90's, Michael Vick in the early 2000's. By my calculation, an Atlanta team will be due sometime or another within this current 10 year span............the question is, what team will he land on? Perhaps Jason Heyward (Braves right fielder) is that guy...maybe all of the other ATL teams will have to wait until 2020...
love your blog: http://hill364sports.blogspot.com/
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