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-   -   Chiefs Calling Out the Fans: Redux (https://www.chiefsplanet.com/BB/showthread.php?t=265050)

T-post Tom 10-12-2012 09:38 PM

Calling Out the Fans: Redux
 
Troy Aikman: Dallas fans go to games to be seen, not to cheer

Jerry Jones’s new stadium is big and fancy, but it doesn’t necessarily give the Cowboys much of a home-field advantage.

That’s the word from Hall of Fame former Cowboys quarterback Troy Aikman, who says he doesn’t think Dallas fans are the type to loudly cheer their teams but are more the type to go to sporting events as social occasions.

“I think for a large part – and the fans don’t want to hear this – a lot of the people that attend sports in this town, they’re there because it’s kind of just a place to be seen,” Aikman said on KTCK-AM, via the Dallas Morning News.

Aikman’s comments come on the heels of a Cowboys home game against the Bears that featured thousands of fans from Chicago making the trip to Dallas to support their team, to such an extent that Bears players said it felt like a home game. Aikman says Chicago fans are different than Dallas fans.

“I’ve always said Dallas isn’t so much a sports town as it is a winner’s town,” Aikman said. “And that’s not that unique. Most towns are like that. There are very few towns like Chicago where you can go out there and go 4-12 and they’re stilling selling out stadiums. That’s pretty unique.”

Aikman added that in his playing days, the Cowboys’ NFC East rivals had better home-field advantages than the Cowboys.

“I don’t think Dallas has ever really had a great home field advantage,” Aikman said. “What I’ve heard is that, ‘Wow, they really lost home field advantage when they left Texas Stadium.’ Texas Stadium really wasn’t that different. Having played playoff games in Texas Stadium, that stadium was rocking, it was great. . . . But when we would play in Philadelphia, New York and walk out of the tunnel, I would have to be yelling at the top of my lungs for guys to hear me. And you get on the plane for the flight home and your head would be pounding, you wouldn’t have a voice, and that’s just the way that it was. There was no way you could go down there near the goal line and use hard count in an opposing stadium. And yet in Texas Stadium, teams did it all the time.”

That won’t be a popular opinion for Aiman to express in Dallas. But that doesn’t make him wrong.

http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com...-not-to-cheer/

CoMoChief 10-12-2012 09:40 PM

Once KC gets a real QB, Arrowhead will be rocking again.

Too bad that won't ever happen.

T-post Tom 10-12-2012 09:45 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CoMoChief (Post 9006832)
Once KC gets a real QB, Arrowhead will be rocking again.

Too bad that won't ever happen.

No worries, the Chiefs have a secret weapon on the payroll:

http://www.btsports.com/ldawsonpic.jpg

KcMizzou 10-12-2012 10:00 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CoMoChief (Post 9006832)
Once KC gets a real QB, Arrowhead will be rocking again.

Too bad that won't ever happen.

It will. The people are revolting.

007 10-12-2012 10:03 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by KcMizzou (Post 9006862)
It will. The people are revolting.

Hey, what do you mean we are revolting?:#

T-post Tom 10-12-2012 10:04 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by KcMizzou (Post 9006862)
It will. The people are revolting.

Hey, we may stink on ice (edit) ...but we're not revolting.

KcMizzou 10-12-2012 10:05 PM

<iframe width="560" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/TYpYs9GBXwY" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

chasedude 10-12-2012 10:15 PM

Arrowhead used to be known as the loudest stadium in the whole league! I remember them using a decibel meter during Marty's days on tv. If I remember correctly it was OVER 120. FYI, 120 is the threshold of pain.

chasedude 10-12-2012 10:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by chasedude (Post 9006895)
Arrowhead used to be known as the loudest stadium in the whole league! I remember them using a decibel meter during Marty's days on tv. If I remember correctly it was OVER 120. FYI, 120 is the threshold of pain.

I stand corrected 116 decibels...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kansas_City_Chiefs

Quote:

All noise is directly attributed to its fans[71] and was once measured at 116 decibels by the Acoustical Design Group of Mission, Kansas.[72] By way of comparison, take-off of aircraft may lead to a sound level of 106 decibels at the ground

BoneKrusher 10-13-2012 06:48 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by chasedude (Post 9006906)
I stand corrected 116 decibels...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kansas_City_Chiefs

wow, that's almost as loud as a Deep Purple concert back in the late seventies.

Rausch 10-13-2012 06:52 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by T-post Tom (Post 9006871)
Hey, we may stink on ice (edit) ...but we're not revolting.

We have not yet begun to defile ourselves...

Deberg_1990 10-13-2012 07:06 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by T-post Tom (Post 9006827)
Troy Aikman: Dallas fans go to games to be seen, not to cheer

Jerry Jones’s new stadium is big and fancy, but it doesn’t necessarily give the Cowboys much of a home-field advantage.

That’s the word from Hall of Fame former Cowboys quarterback Troy Aikman, who says he doesn’t think Dallas fans are the type to loudly cheer their teams but are more the type to go to sporting events as social occasions.

“I think for a large part – and the fans don’t want to hear this – a lot of the people that attend sports in this town, they’re there because it’s kind of just a place to be seen,” Aikman said on KTCK-AM, via the Dallas Morning News.

Aikman’s comments come on the heels of a Cowboys home game against the Bears that featured thousands of fans from Chicago making the trip to Dallas to support their team, to such an extent that Bears players said it felt like a home game. Aikman says Chicago fans are different than Dallas fans.

“I’ve always said Dallas isn’t so much a sports town as it is a winner’s town,” Aikman said. “And that’s not that unique. Most towns are like that. There are very few towns like Chicago where you can go out there and go 4-12 and they’re stilling selling out stadiums. That’s pretty unique.”

Aikman added that in his playing days, the Cowboys’ NFC East rivals had better home-field advantages than the Cowboys.

“I don’t think Dallas has ever really had a great home field advantage,” Aikman said. “What I’ve heard is that, ‘Wow, they really lost home field advantage when they left Texas Stadium.’ Texas Stadium really wasn’t that different. Having played playoff games in Texas Stadium, that stadium was rocking, it was great. . . . But when we would play in Philadelphia, New York and walk out of the tunnel, I would have to be yelling at the top of my lungs for guys to hear me. And you get on the plane for the flight home and your head would be pounding, you wouldn’t have a voice, and that’s just the way that it was. There was no way you could go down there near the goal line and use hard count in an opposing stadium. And yet in Texas Stadium, teams did it all the time.”

That won’t be a popular opinion for Aiman to express in Dallas. But that doesn’t make him wrong.

http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com...-not-to-cheer/


He's right of course, but he shouldn't have said it. Lots of Chiefs fans and nearly every city is like this. Fans want to see winning.

Imagine if Len Dawson said this about Chiefs fans.

Pasta Little Brioni 10-13-2012 08:56 AM

Cowboys fans are a different breed....douchebags

Saccopoo 10-13-2012 09:05 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CoMoChief (Post 9006832)
Once KC gets a real QB, Arrowhead will be rocking again.

Too bad that won't ever happen.

Bullshit.

http://espn.go.com/photo/2012/1002/n...ith_bl_600.jpg

PRIEST 10-13-2012 09:23 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Guru (Post 9006869)
Hey, what do you mean we are revolting?:#



LMAO


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