Columbus gets a lot of reps (from the local ESPN-affiliated sports radio broadcasts the most, most obvi) as being
the sports town. as much as I drink that Scarlet + Grey kool-aid, I do think this is a bit of a delusion of grandeur for a city without a pro football or pro basketball team. goes to show you how strong the Buckeyes are represented. logistically speaking, it is simply from the sheer number of students aka brand loyalists in Buckeyes fans (who have been noted to perhaps be the most well-traveled NCAA program ever). anyways, the point I think there has to be more of an economic representation on the professional level for a city to be branded the "best" in a pool of sports markets
historically speaking, the cities of Cincinnati, Seattle, and Atlanta are branded as the worst
Cinci is experiencing it's third winning season in 20 years, yet still was on the verge of a black out last week against the Arizona Cardinals. to also humorously back up my statement, all the star Bengals players this year (Dalton, Green, Benson etc etc) were so desperate for a sell-out against the Ravens this Sunday, that they did some grass-roots lobbying to all the residents/fans of Cinci to attend said final game of the season
goes to show you how economics tie into Your Local Sports Team. no one would ever question a company's still lingering failure if the company has produced a product that has been sub-par for 20 years, then suddenly is good/great for a year (with apologies to the New Orleans Saints). also Paul Brown is a major factor to Cinci's football tendency to herp that derp. also, guess to what percentage Cinci's Paul Brown Stadium was built on the dime of the taxpaying, common South-Western Ohioan? 100 percent of it, actually
I feel like Atlanta gets an unfair rep for being the most popular worst sports market in the market. I actually had quite the engaging convo with Pander Bear about that this morning. I will expand on my reasons if anybody is brave enough to penetrate the banality that is the Atlanta Sports Market!
what I despise most about this topic is the Boston Sports Market and how it is blindly and ubiquitously heralded (mostly by them chowdah-heads, obvi) as the best market of all-time. we need to take this into perspective. Boston is only a superb market for Boston teams. if you were to go to Atlanta, you would see SEC, ACC, and even yes the Big Ten being blatantly repped on the collegiate level. and holy smokes, I couldn't even imagine how many different and to what extent sports fans are on the pro level
I am actually very interested in this topic, obvi. thanks for the inquest PB
