Sports have never really been a big thing for me. I suppose it probably has something to do with growing up as a "smart kid" and thus having the traditional smart-kid disdain for jocks and the respect they get despite the quality of their academics or character. It might also have something to do with growing up as a "fat kid," as well, and having the traditional fat-kid complete lack of any sort of physical prowess whatsoever. Except soccer and kickball, I was actually halfway decent at those two.
Anyway, my ridiculous childhood aside, being a sports fan is like being a gamer. Some people are into it, and some people aren't, and it's really hard for those who are "into it" to explain themselves to people who just don't get it. I don't know who the teams are, except a couple local teams, and I certainly don't know who any of the individual players are, unless they've been in the news or something. I've never understood people who track players and their stats and spend hours crunching numbers and analyzing game footage and whatever, but at the same time there's probably people out there who will never understand why I would want to play an RPG a second time. Or a first time. At the start of a game, I usually don't know who's who, so I usually don't care who wins, and I often end up doing the "chick thing," which is making up random shit about the teams and players involved and basing my decision on who I think should win on totally arbitrary things, like wether or not the guy that made the last touchdown had a good victory dance.
Having said all that, though, a sporting event can be really entertaining to watch if there's two good teams and the action is really close. The problem with watching a whole game, though, is that things tend to get repetitive pretty quickly. I don't know that I have ever watched any one sporting event all the way through from start to finish, except for the football games I had to attend as part of the marching band in high school. I tend to lose interest and go off to do something else for awhile, after which I may or may not come back to the game. Sports with a faster pace like basketball and soccer tend to hold my interest a lot better than slower-paced sports like baseball, football, and fucking
golf. How anyone can stand to watch golf is beyond me. Hell, I might actually agree to watch a game of b-ball or soccer with someone. There also seems to be more variety in these sports, although it might just seem that way because I've seen more of them.
About hockey, though... I haven't watched much hockey, so I can't really say how much I do or don't dig it. I did, however, happen to catch some of the women's hockey during the winter olympics, and I have to say it was surprisingly engaging. <p><div style="text-align:center">
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Edited by: [url=http://p068.ezboard.com/brpgww60462.showUserPublicProfile?gid=brainwalker>BrainWalker</A] at: 5/29/06 15:12