Anyone who's attended a Philadelphia sports event could have warned Sarah Palin that she might be treated to something less than brotherly love when dropping the puck at a recent Flyers game. The city's fans have an infamous brand of sportsmanship, exemplified by the incessant booing of opponents and struggling home team players (even greats like Mike Schmidt and Jimmy Rollins) and epitomized by incidents like the 1968 snowball attack on Santa Claus during an Eagles halftime.Yet with their beloved Fightin' Phils dispatching the Los Angeles Dodgers and entering their first World Series since 1993, there isn't much to boo about. Nor will there be, if the Phils end up winning the whole thing.
But would a World Series title change the rowdy, taunting Philly sports fan -- as ready for a fight as he is for the next beer -- into a upstanding crowd member? Click here to see our investigation and check out the gallery below for a round-up of some of the most unsportsmanlike moments in athletic support.
Shameful Moments in Sports Fandom
Booed Santa. At a highly mythologized December 1968 game, Philadelphia Eagles spectators pelted a man playing Santa with snowballs during an overlong Christmas half-time show.
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The Bartman Incident. In game 6 of the 2003 NLCS, fan Steve Bartman appeared to swat the ball out of the way of Moises Alou, a move many believe cost Chicago a World Series slot. Bartman was put under police guard and reportedly considered the witness protection program.
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Denver Self-Destructs. In an inexplicable (but not uncommon) case of fans destroying their own city, Denver Broncos fans smashed storefronts, started dumpster fires, and overturned police cars following their 1998 Superbowl victory.
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Ten Cent Beer Night. Boozy chaos ensued when Cleveland's Municipal Stadium offered Indians fans beer at a dime apiece in 1974. The game was forfeited to Texas Rangers when the crowd stormed the field armed with home-made weapons and (literally) stole the bases.
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Disco Demolition Night. In 1979, a Chicago DJ offered tickets to a White Sox game as bounty for destroying disco records. A packed stadium of crazed anti-disco fans pelted players with LPs, stormed the field, and ultimately caused Chicago to forfeit.
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The Shoe Incident. It's said that nonstop crowd heckling drove several members of the 1979 Bruins into the seats at Madison Square Garden to tussle with New Yorkers. (Boston's Mike Milbury infamously beat a fan with his own shoe.)
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Trash Gordon. A tradition was born when Jeff Gordon beat fan favorite Dale Earnhardt Jr. at a 2004 Nextel Cup. Fans threw a blizzard of trash onto the Talladega Speedway, so much so that Gordon got back in his car to execute celebratory doughnuts in the debris.
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Glass of Punch.When a Pistons fan famously threw a beverage at the Pacers' Ron Artest, he charged the stands and punched another fan in the face.
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Giant Snowball Fight. In December 1995, cold, crabby Giants fans hurled giant chunks of ice frozen to their seats at San Diego chargers, resulting in hospitalizations, arrests, and the revocation of season-tickets.
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Souvenir Ball Day. The brilliant LA Dogders handed out over 50,000 souvenir baseballs to stadium goers in 1995, who unleashed a barrage of them at umpires and fellow fans after a series of close calls led to the ejection of manager Tommy Lasorda.
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Gallery by Julieanne Smolinski.
Sara Palin got off lucky. At least the hockey mom didn't have batteries lobbed at her, like St. Louis Cardinals outfielder J.D. Drew did during a 1999 game at Veterans Stadium -- a stadium that infamously housed its own holding cell and makeshift courtroom for processing unruly fans.
Though the Vet is gone, the angry, sometimes assault-prone Philly fans remain. Some believe a title, and the civic pride that comes along with it, just might sap a smidge of that vitriol and help end years of boorish behavior, perhaps at least the kind that could land you in jail.
"A Phillies World Series title would probably swell our Grinch hearts about 100 times," admits Roger Leister, a longtime fan of all the city's teams. "We'll sing and party like the Whos in Whoville for a while, but revert right back to being miserable SOBs next spring after raising the banner, ready to rip into the first player who can't lay down a sacrifice bunt."
What Leister is referring to is how the springtime chants of "M-V-P" were a distant memory to Jimmy Rollins in August, when the all-star shortstop was booed during a slump at the plate. His comment that Philly fans were "front-runners" didn't do much to help.
But J-Roll shouldn't take it personally. "If there is even a slight thought in the fans' minds that they should boo, they will, because it's a routine. It's expected of them," says Scooter Lammey, a Phils fan and independent filmmaker. "If someone discovered the cure for cancer, was announcing the 'antidote' to the world at an Eagles game and came out wearing a Cowboys jersey, he would be booed so loudly the world would never know the cure."
And if the Phils win, Lammey thinks the behavior will continue, at least at Eagles games. "Winning the World Series would only give fans more reason to boo the Eagles' failures for the next two months."
Steve Thomas, a fan from Philly's western 'burbs, doesn't foresee a championship title having much effect either. "A World Series victory would be well deserved for Philly fans. But it wouldn't stop the booing. It would just make it more arrogant," he says. "Ya know, like New York fans."
That's something Mark Letcher, a Philadelphia transplant now living in Oklahoma, hopes doesn't happen.
"It would really suck if Philly fans start to act like Red Sox fans after they won in 2004. They just became the most arrogant, cocky SOBs around," he says, adding that for the mystique of the Philly fan to endure, the future will need to remain somewhat bleak.
"We will always, always need something to complain about, or some sort of other shoe to drop, in order to survive as Philadelphia fans."
Fair enough. We just hope political figures remember this next time they schedule a campaign event.



























Comments:
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Thursday 16 October
By Paul
As a Philly fan, I can say without a shadow of a doubt that we will continue to be the fans we are. And if you don't get what we're about, you're obviously from some place that is much more lame than Philly, such as Los Angeles, or New York City.
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Monday 20 October
By chris
Philly fans are the scum of the earth and all of them need to die.They actually beat the hell out a 65 year old woman who was cheering for the redskins.The got her at halftime and beat her down and kicked her repeatedly.Some people actually cheered and egged them on and others said rape her,while some walked by and either spit on her or poured beer on her.there are no fans in philly.Just total scum looking for trouble and people to bully
Thursday 16 October
By Pugiron
There is no where more lame than Philly, Hence, the fans are mad at the world. You would be mad at the world too if you had to hate your parents for living in Philly, hate your spose for living in Philly, hate your kids for living in Philly and hate yourself for living in Phillidoucheia.
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Friday 17 October
By SabresFan
You think Philly sucks? Try living in Buffalo.
Monday 20 October
By Shane
Cmon. I live in Philly and i'm happy about it. I know that your probobly from New York or Dallas(Bleahhhhh) but don't say we're lame.
Thursday 16 October
By B Russ
When I think of shameful fans, from NE Ohio, I think about when the Browns fans threw bottles onto the field a few years back against the Jaguars at Cleveland Browns Stadium. Extremely shameful, but then again, 2 Cleveland incidents on the same list would be a little much.
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Thursday 23 October
By squeegee666
No shameful moment in fandom would be complete without the 1975 NFC playoff game between the Vikings and the Cowboys. After a questionable hail mary pass gave the Cowboys the lead with 14 seconds left, a drunk and enraged Minnesota fan threw a Jack Daniels bottle from the second deck at referee Armen Terzian standing on the 30 yard line knocking him unconscious. There is no truth to the rumor that the Vikings gave the fan a tryout at QB the following season.
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Thursday 16 October
By Mike
Let's get one thing straight. Santa was drunk. In a shabby, stained costume. They yanked the guy out of the stands and put him on the field because the crowd was upset. Why were they upset? Because despite tanking most of the season, the Eagles were up in the game, and that would mean losing the first pick in the upcoming college draft and the right to pick consensus number 1 pick, Heisman Trophy winner and future Hall of Famer OJ Simpson, who had yet to murder *anyone*. And out stumbles a drunk Santa in a shabby suit and there's snow piled up everywhere. What would YOU have done?
And a World Series won't make Philadelphia stop caring. We're hard on opponents and our own players because we care so much about our sports teams. We go to the games and buy the merchandise, and all we ask in return is that you play your hardest, start to finish. If, at the end of the day, you can say you did that, that guy doesn't get booed. Yeah, we booed Schmidt, but he didn't help matters. He didn't get us as much as we didn't get him. Mike's laid back attitude made fans think he wasn't trying his hardest, and that made fans upset because of how good he already was, but instead of trying to smooth things over with the fans, he took them on as adversaries instead, and that only fueled the animosity.
All I can say is, if you cheer a team who's not playing their hardest, who's just coasting through games, never winning anything significant, that doesn't make you a good fan, it makes you a moron.
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Friday 17 October
By Justin
Actually, the reason Santa Clause got snowballs thrown at him was a little more complicated than "an overlong overtime show." Every year before Christmas, the Eagles had a halftime show that included Santa Clause. However, in 1968 the regular Santa Clause was stuck in traffic, so officials grabbed a kid off the street and put a haphazard Santa costume on him. Unfortunately, the kid was inebriated to the point of not being able to stand. That was why people began throwing snowballs at Santa. Please get your facts straight.
The fans will probably relent a bit if the Eagles win a superbowl. Despite what Philly fans say, Philadelphia is and always will be a football town. Most fans go to Phillies games to be social/have something to do in the summer. Fans go to Eagles games to see them win.
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Monday 20 October
By Chrissy
Watch the World Series and see if you will be able to make this statement with confidence ever again:
"Most fans go to Phillies games to be social/have something to do in the summer. Fans go to Eagles games to see them win."
Listen pal, just because you can't grasp baseball and their fans doesn't mean the Phillies don't have a hardcore following!
Friday 17 October
By Sore Loser
What about the Cleveland game in 198x where the fans in the Dawg Pound tossed ice chunks onto the field, ultimately hitting and knocking a cameraman unconscious, then cheering and throwing more at him while he lay there motionless?
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Friday 17 October
By Thomas
You forgot the single most shameful moment in sports history. Now I hate the Cowboys as much as the next Oilers fan, but when Eagles fans actually cheered when Michael Irvin went down with the brutal neck injury that ended his career, that was truly disgusting.
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Monday 20 October
By Kevin
Mike Irvin was a disgusting human being, and if they would show the play where he got taken out, I'd watch and cheer AGAIN!! We painted his face in the bowls of the urinals at the vet.lol
Monday 20 October
By pphama2
Make sure you know all the facts about Mikey Irvin getting cheered for being hurt. During pre-game warm ups, he was taunting the fans in the end zone (Grabbing his crotch and pointing at them) Mikey Irvins was a piece of Cr_p! I laughed my butt off.
Wednesday 22 October
By Thomas
Like I said, I hate the guy myself, but the fact is you really shouldn't cheer when a fellow human being breaks his neck and could possibly die.
Friday 17 October
By John
It would be nice if you would have taken the time to find ACTUAL pictures from these games for your gallery instead of the stock photos you used. Lazy.
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Friday 17 October
By Drew
Hate speech and booing? You would have think Sarah Palin would have been right at home considering what their rallies have been like.
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Friday 17 October
By M
Just because the world revolves around New York City, don't ever forget Jeff "F-ing" Maier. At least Steve Bartman's "Error" went from a possible out to a foul ball instead of into a Home Run
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Sunday 19 October
By e
Philadelphia by far has the best fans of all time. We are the most devoted loyal and talked about in the whole league.We are the shit and no one can take that from us.
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Monday 20 October
By sportsfan
LOL. Yeah, a true Phillies fan likes to throw "weapons" at other team players and injure them. A true sports fan, however, sits there in shock and applauds when the player is able to get up and walk off the field.