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Chief Boot Knocker
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KC Star: Chiefs again feel a city’s devotion
http://www.kansascity.com/2010/10/02...-devotion.html
Suddenly and without warning, the dark clouds have disappeared. The weather is perfect on an autumn afternoon in Kansas City, and people go about their business with pleasant thoughts about a football team whose days seem brighter. In Independence, Andy Sawmiller takes his family for pizza and pulls his SUV onto Noland Road, four Chiefs flags attached to the rolled-down windows and flapping in the breeze. In North Kansas City, a barber drapes a hair cloth over a man who needs a trim, and as it sometimes does at Dub’s, the talk turns to the Chiefs. “There’s a change,” says Jack Bets-worth, the man in the chair. “If they can beat the Colts,” the barber, Jack DiMartino, says before his voice trails off and he eyes the white hairs poking over Betsworth’s ears. In the Northland, Wanda Fankhauser, a single mother, considers the next game at Arrowhead Stadium and how the team’s 3-0 start compelled her this week to buy season tickets for the first time since 2006. She used to take her son, Tyler, and now she likes the idea of Tyler, 24, taking his son, 4-year-old Ayden, to the games, pointing to the players and telling the boy that this is what it used to feel like to watch a game at Arrowhead. This is a Chiefs town again, and Kansas Citians are absorbing the team’s best start in seven years — and wondering how much of this is real. For so long, Chiefs fans grew accustomed to losing and kept their red and gold clothing at home. Discussing the team became a discouraging enterprise, and Arrowhead became a relic of what it once was. “I hate saying this,” Chiefs offensive lineman Brian Waters says, “but over the last few years, I’ve kind of felt like, for the first time, that our fans were similar to other fans that we’ve seen on the road. “Even when we first got here, when we were seven-and-nine, six-and-10, I never felt that way. They cheered as loud as possible, no matter what our record was, no matter what was going on.” Some skeptics remain. Perhaps that’s why Arrowhead wasn’t full even last Sunday, when the Chiefs walloped the San Francisco 49ers 31-10 and remained one of the NFL’s three undefeated teams. But the enthusiasm is returning, and no matter which side of town you’re on, it’s clear that the Chiefs are worth talking about again. Players have noticed, too. Defensive end Glenn Dorsey now hears from happy fans when he goes to the grocery store. Cornerback Brandon Carr, anonymous in public his first two seasons, was stopped for autographs in the team merchandise store at Arrowhead. Coach Todd Haley noticed last week how many people were wearing Chiefs gear when he attended his youngest daughter’s soccer game. “There’s something different in the air,” Carr says. “We all can feel it.” ••• Casey Wiegmann remembers the old days, when Arrowhead was intimidating and the Chiefs’ success wasn’t such a surprise. The crowd would scream when Dante Hall ran onto the field. It would erupt when the defense forced third-and-long. The Chiefs belonged to Kansas City, and for that stretch, Kansas City belonged to the Chiefs. “People were making noise for no reason,” says Wiegmann, who was with the Chiefs during 2001-07 before signing with Denver. “Until someone witnesses it, it’s hard to describe.” But when Wiegmann played for the Broncos, he says, visiting Arrowhead the last two seasons felt more like a preseason game. Fans expected to be disappointed, and many didn’t bother showing up because there were better ways to spend money and time than watching a team that looked overmatched each Sunday. That’s why Fankhauser, the single mother, dropped her season tickets after the ’06 season, the last time the Chiefs finished with a winning record and made the playoffs. Arrowhead had once been a place where memories were made, and attending games with young Tyler was a way for a mother and son to bond. She enjoyed talking football and plotting the future after Chiefs wins, on the drive home to Platte City. Then, the team raised ticket prices, the economy tanked and the Chiefs did, too. Spending Sundays at Arrowhead felt like a waste. “A financial investment and time investment,” she says, “that we weren’t necessarily benefiting from.” So she stayed home, and many others did, too. The Chiefs lost 38 games in three seasons, and they were blacked out on local television last December for the first time in two decades. Kansas City was losing, and worse, it was losing interest in the Chiefs. “You’ve just got to understand,” Waters says, “that so many people here base their Mondays off of what we do on Sundays. “This is the city’s heartbeat. Chiefs football is the city’s heartbeat.” When Wiegmann re-signed with the Chiefs this past offseason, a young teammate approached the 37-year-old veteran and asked which stadium was the NFL’s toughest. The loudest, rowdiest, craziest stadium he’d ever experienced. Wiegmann said Arrowhead, and the youngster had a hard time believing it. The Chiefs’ core, players who have been in the league three seasons or fewer, have never known Arrowhead as anything more than a place where a ticket buys little more than disappointment. They heard the stories about how Kansas City had embraced football and how Arrowhead’s parking lots used to be packed on Sundays. But reality didn’t match the legend. “I heard a lot about it,” says Dorsey, who was drafted by the Chiefs in 2008. “It was two rough years.” Then the 2010 season began, and the Chiefs defeated San Diego on national television. The Chiefs beat Cleveland, too. Last Sunday, the 49ers seemed to have no chance. The team had its city’s attention again. “It’s different. Everybody is patting you on the back and stuff like that,” Dorsey says. “They’re getting excited about us again.” Fankhauser says her son watched the Chargers game on television and remembered the old feeling of watching a winner. Tyler’s own son began asking about the Chiefs, too. Tyler said something to his mother recently. “Too bad you don’t have tickets anymore,” she says he told her. ••• When Haley is on a flight that travels over the Missouri River, that’s when he thinks about the hold a football team has on its city. From above, the water is brown and looks lifeless, and instead of boats and riverfront attractions, there is only the occasional industrial plant or casino. Pittsburgh used to look like that, too. That’s Haley’s hometown, and he remembers when the Monongahela River was dull, and few residents cared to venture downtown. Then the Steelers started winning, and Pittsburgh wanted to show itself off, improve its riverfront appearance, make downtown a place worth visiting. Now, Pittsburgh is a vibrant city with rivers packed with boats and fishermen. Haley says he sees the same potential for Kansas City. “Our ultimate goal is the Super Bowl,” he says. “We have to get to be a good team, and then take it from there.” Haley said he can’t get ahead of himself or the difficulty of turning a 3-0 start into a season-long success story. But the man can’t help but think sometimes about how Kansas City might respond if the Chiefs become one of America’s best teams. He says there’s a correlation between a team’s success and its city’s mood. “The team is the catalyst for making great strides,” he says. “I know how it felt. I know how I felt when the Steelers lost, the whole week. It was the worst. How quick could Sunday come? School sucked. Everything. It sucked. Sucked. It wasn’t fun. But when they won, man, what a great week.” He admits that it’ll take time, and he’s aware that change comes slowly. It took three years for Kansas City to get over the Chiefs; a reconciliation won’t happen overnight. In that barbershop in North Kansas City, the owner, Alex Castro, is among the skeptics. But he’s willing to give the Chiefs a chance. “It’s been the same thing,” he says during a slow moment. “Next year, next year. Well, maybe this is the year.” Fankhauser has put a deposit on 2011 season tickets. She says she’s not sure how her plans will change if the Chiefs don’t continue making improvements. Waters says he understands that enthusiasm will be slow to rebuild. He says he was surprised this past Sunday to look into the stands and see thousands of empty seats. “Five years ago,” he says, “that stadium would have been just a sea of red, with people in the seats. It’s getting back, but it’s not where it was.” The economy hasn’t fully recovered, and people are more careful with their money. Besides, who knows if the Chiefs’ fast start is a sign of future glory, or simply the latest cruel twist in these years of heartbreak? Waters says he’s curious to see how Kansas City responds if the Chiefs continue winning — or if they lose a game or two. “That’ll be a true test for everybody,” he says. “For us and how we’re able to bounce back, and for our fans and community. “As you continue to win, the doubts continue to go away.” ••• Vernon Morris sits in the shade at a bus stop in Independence. He’s waiting for a bus to take him home, but while he waits, he doesn’t mind talking some football. He’s not a Chiefs fan, but he has heard plenty about them. “I like good football,” he says. “Chiefs are three-and-oh, huh?” He’s not proud of this, but Morris spent 20 months in the U.S. Penitentiary at Leavenworth for illegal drug distribution. It was inside that the Illinois native heard about the team that played at Arrowhead, the team that was down on its luck for a while, that once determined Kansas City’s weekly mood. Morris, 42, was released last November. In the time since, he has enrolled at Vatterott College. He says he believes in second chances. “And third chances,” he says with a smile. “And fourth.” He says he learned at Leavenworth that the true Chiefs fans are willing to give their team unlimited chances. The Chiefs might break their fans’ hearts, but the loyal ones are always willing to come back. Since he’s been out, Morris says he has learned how important the Chiefs are to Kansas City. He sees the reminders all over town, and he says these last few weeks are the first time he has seen what the old crowd was talking about. He gets calls sometimes now, from men he met inside, and they want to talk about the Chiefs’ hot start, and how the playoffs don’t look so impossible anymore. Morris says he knows he doesn’t represent all Kansas Citians, or even most. But he is a Kansas Citian now, and he says that all the recent chatter has made him curious. He says he wants to know more about the team that people care this much about, that can make people this happy, feel this united, just by winning a handful of games. He adjusts himself, and his feet dangle over the wall and are touched by the sun. “Sometimes you’ve got to start from the bottom again,” he says. “That’s what they gotta do now. “I’m going to try to get to a game and see them live. It makes me want to be a part of what’s going on.” _______________________ Happy to see some positivity concerning my favorite team. |
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#2 |
Chief Boot Knocker
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Things are looking up, even if the playoffs are unlikely, a playoff win is improbable, and the Super Bowl is years away.
Compare this article from 2008 to the one today: Posnanski: Chiefs a Joke http://www.kansascity.com/sports/chi...ry/797000.html Punchless Chiefs have become a punch line OK, see, we didn’t need this. Sure, we all knew the Chiefs were going to rebuild this year with young players. We all knew they were going to make mistakes, lose games, commit penalties. We all knew this was going to be a long season, and we would make the best of it by gritting our teeth and appreciating the little things. We braced ourselves. But we didn’t need this. We didn’t need the Chiefs to become a national joke. We Kansas City folk have had enough Far Side humor with the Royals for a dozen years now, with their outfield burlesque, their base running antics, their managerial merry-go-round, their attempts to sign a professional softball pitcher. We didn’t need the Chiefs to step over that line. Hey, it was OK if they lost. We figured they would lose. We just didn’t need them to take the Nestea plunge into comedy. Then, there they were on Sunday, playing three different quarterbacks, inventing a Scooby-Doo mystery about dizzy spells, allowing 300 yards rushing to a Raiders team that could not throw and, it goes without saying, losing for the 11th consecutive time. Oakland crushed the Chiefs 23-8. The only thing working Sunday was the concession stand. “Um, please be patient,” the guy at the concession stand said after 20 minutes had passed and he still had not brought out the cheeseburger I ordered. To be fair, he had brought out a half-filled cup of French fries for $4.75, such an embarrassment that somebody behind us in line actually started yelling at the guy. OK, so maybe it has come to this; maybe nothing actually works now at Arrowhead Stadium. Still, it was worth hoping that the Chiefs would not become a laughingstock. The hope lasted exactly five plays … and then on second down and 10, Chiefs starting quarterback Damon Huard ran off the field. “Where the heck is he going?” we asked. Then some rather small person wearing No. 10 stood behind the center. “Who the heck is that?” we asked. Then that small person with the No. 10 jersey took the snap and started running. “What the heck is going on?” we asked. That turned out to be Marques Hagans, a 5-foot-9 wide receiver from Virginia. Well, he was a receiver and a quarterback at Virginia. He was drafted by St. Louis in the fifth round last year (as a receiver, of course). He got released last year. So, to sum up, the Chiefs had a receiver that the St. Louis Rams cut who was now lined up at quarterback. Hagans ran the ball, but the Chiefs’ Dwayne Bowe — no doubt as baffled as the rest of us — shifted illegally, the play was called back, and the whole thing was best forgotten, kind of like a bad dream. The Chiefs wouldn’t let it alone. Four plays later, Huard ran off the field again, and this little wide-receiver dude came back on the field, and this time ran for 2 yards. And it counted. Things, if you can believe it, got goofier. The next series, Huard threw an interception. And the series after that, the Chiefs sent out a whole new quarterback named Tyler Thigpen. Really. Tyler Thigpen. He holds every passing record they have at Coastal Carolina, in part because the school did not have a football team before he got there. He was drafted in the final round by Minnesota last year and released before the season began. Well, it stands to reason — after all, the Vikings are overburdened with too many good quarterbacks. Thigpen completed his first pass to Bowe. He promptly missed his next six, three of which could have been intercepted. It felt a bit like watching a reality TV show where they pull some guy out of the stands and make him an NFL quarterback. No offense to Thigpen, who seems like a nice young man and all, but we all waited for Huard — who, yes, is a 35-year-old NFL backup, but at least he’s a legitimate professional football player — to return to the game. Only Huard would not come back into the game. Why? Well, Shaggy and Scooby, that’s the mystery: “Damon Huard had a mild head trauma,” was the announcement made in the Chiefs press box two quarters later. “Damon Huard had a little dizziness when he got hit,” was the pronouncement of Chiefs coach Herm Edwards after the game. “My neck is a little sore,” was the diagnosis of the patient, Damon Huard himself. Apparently, the Chiefs had not told him in advance about his dizziness. He smartly did not want to go into any more detail. He did not want to talk about whether he could have played. He did not want to talk about next week. Hey, you don’t play as a backup quarterback in the NFL for 12 seasons without learning a few tricks of survival. “We couldn’t put Damon back in,” Edwards said. “That wouldn’t have been fair to him.” Instead, they left Thigpen out there to roast. You know how physicists figured that if Jamaican sprinter Usain Bolt had gone all-out at the Olympics, he could have run the 100 meters in an astonishing 9.55 seconds? Well, those same physicists figured that if the Oakland defenders could catch, Tyler Thigpen would have thrown eight interceptions Sunday. As it was, he threw only one interception — and he did have one touchdown drive, thanks to a Lynn Swann-like catch by Bowe and a couple of helpful penalties on the Raiders. Other than that drive, though, he missed 17 of his 24 passes. Then, it would be wrong to blame Thigpen for the loss. He was one of the Chiefs’ better players on this day. The Chiefs defense could not tackle anyone — the Raiders ran for twice as many yards as they did a week earlier against Denver. Chiefs running back Larry Johnson managed 1.8 yards per carry (and moaned afterward that he thinks the Chiefs have lost faith in him), Marques Hagans sneaked back into the game as quarterback in the second half and actually completed one pass (for 5 yards). “We got embarrassed,” Edwards said. “It’s embarrassing,” tight end Tony Gonzalez said. “I think we’re all embarrassed,” guard Brian Waters said. Yes. Embarrassed was the word of the day. At some point during the Chiefs Comedy Hour, management flashed on the scoreboard that they are right now taking orders for season tickets in 2009. Apparently, that was the big punch line
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The Devil of DFW. Last edited by Paniero; 10-02-2010 at 10:36 PM.. |
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#3 |
Sarcasm
Join Date: Dec 2007
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Damn that was a long article, and no, I can't bring myself to read all of it.
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#4 | |
Chief Boot Knocker
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Quote:
By the way, when did the Blue Ridge Mall turn into a Wal-Mart? I haven't been there since they had a Topsy's, V's next to the downstairs movie theater, and a Tape World, but I thought it'd still be there 10 years after I left KC.
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The Devil of DFW. |
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#5 | |
Sarcasm
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Olathe
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Quote:
I think the Blue Ridge Mall changed recently, like over the last 3 years. I could be wrong, because I've only visited about once or twice a year. You talked me into it. I suppose I'll read this monster.... |
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#6 |
I’m a Mahomo!
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Mid-Missouri
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At work here in Mid-MO...the Chiefs were the talk all week...as a matter of fact a group of 30 wanted to buy Jax tickets but were told they were soldout! I think they are planning a group trip to the Arizona game now.
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#7 |
The talking stonehead
Join Date: Feb 2006
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Good article. I have no idea why he felt the need to add that last segment though. It was long enough already without the Vernon "Bam" Morris story.
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#8 |
I'll be back.
Join Date: Nov 2002
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I heard this music as I read this article:
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Chiefs game films |
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#9 |
Sarcasm
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Olathe
Casino cash: $3312900
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I understand why Vick always dreamed about playing for the Chiefs while he was in the pen.
It sounds like the Chiefs are the talk of the cell sometimes. In a way, it's funny how the Chiefs and Vick have resurrected their franchise/careers at the same time, after Vick wanted to play for the Chiefs. Now that I think of it, Vick, Charles, and McCluster would be a dream rushing team. |
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#10 |
turd polisher
Join Date: Mar 2001
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Not to mention the fact that if the guy's on parole he would be in trouble having had contact with ex-cons that he was inside with...I think that's a no-no.
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I do not think country was intended to be sung consistently in tune. |
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#11 | |
Unsparing
Join Date: Aug 2008
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Quote:
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1. Merciless, severe. 2. Given freely and generously. 100% refusal to overrate 20 year Head Coaches with ZERO ****ing rings as a Head Coach. CP's Official Professor of 'Dem Blues for 2019/2020! |
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#12 |
Kind of a mod
Join Date: Aug 2005
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Nice read, but how sad is it that all it took was 3-0 to cause the optimism. This team has sucked hardcore for way too long.
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#13 |
Man of Culture
Join Date: Aug 2000
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Babb: Chiefs again feel a city's devotion
Chiefs again feel a city's devotion
By KENT BABB The Kansas City Star Suddenly and without warning, the dark clouds have disappeared. The weather is perfect on an autumn afternoon in Kansas City, and people go about their business with pleasant thoughts about a football team whose days seem brighter. In Independence, Andy Sawmiller takes his family for pizza and pulls his SUV onto Noland Road, four Chiefs flags attached to the rolled-down windows and flapping in the breeze. In North Kansas City, a barber drapes a hair cloth over a man who needs a trim, and as it sometimes does at Dub’s, the talk turns to the Chiefs. “There’s a change,” says Jack Bets-worth, the man in the chair. “If they can beat the Colts,” the barber, Jack DiMartino, says before his voice trails off and he eyes the white hairs poking over Betsworth’s ears. In the Northland, Wanda Fankhauser, a single mother, considers the next game at Arrowhead Stadium and how the team’s 3-0 start compelled her this week to buy season tickets for the first time since 2006. She used to take her son, Tyler, and now she likes the idea of Tyler, 24, taking his son, 4-year-old Ayden, to the games, pointing to the players and telling the boy that this is what it used to feel like to watch a game at Arrowhead. This is a Chiefs town again, and Kansas Citians are absorbing the team’s best start in seven years — and wondering how much of this is real. For so long, Chiefs fans grew accustomed to losing and kept their red and gold clothing at home. Discussing the team became a discouraging enterprise, and Arrowhead became a relic of what it once was. “I hate saying this,” Chiefs offensive lineman Brian Waters says, “but over the last few years, I’ve kind of felt like, for the first time, that our fans were similar to other fans that we’ve seen on the road. “Even when we first got here, when we were seven-and-nine, six-and-10, I never felt that way. They cheered as loud as possible, no matter what our record was, no matter what was going on.” Some skeptics remain. Perhaps that’s why Arrowhead wasn’t full even last Sunday, when the Chiefs walloped the San Francisco 49ers 31-10 and remained one of the NFL’s three undefeated teams. But the enthusiasm is returning, and no matter which side of town you’re on, it’s clear that the Chiefs are worth talking about again. Players have noticed, too. Defensive end Glenn Dorsey now hears from happy fans when he goes to the grocery store. Cornerback Brandon Carr, anonymous in public his first two seasons, was stopped for autographs in the team merchandise store at Arrowhead. Coach Todd Haley noticed last week how many people were wearing Chiefs gear when he attended his youngest daughter’s soccer game. “There’s something different in the air,” Carr says. “We all can feel it.” ••• Casey Wiegmann remembers the old days, when Arrowhead was intimidating and the Chiefs’ success wasn’t such a surprise. The crowd would scream when Dante Hall ran onto the field. It would erupt when the defense forced third-and-long. The Chiefs belonged to Kansas City, and for that stretch, Kansas City belonged to the Chiefs. “People were making noise for no reason,” says Wiegmann, who was with the Chiefs during 2001-07 before signing with Denver. “Until someone witnesses it, it’s hard to describe.” But when Wiegmann played for the Broncos, he says, visiting Arrowhead the last two seasons felt more like a preseason game. Fans expected to be disappointed, and many didn’t bother showing up because there were better ways to spend money and time than watching a team that looked overmatched each Sunday. That’s why Fankhauser, the single mother, dropped her season tickets after the ’06 season, the last time the Chiefs finished with a winning record and made the playoffs. Arrowhead had once been a place where memories were made, and attending games with young Tyler was a way for a mother and son to bond. She enjoyed talking football and plotting the future after Chiefs wins, on the drive home to Platte City. Then, the team raised ticket prices, the economy tanked and the Chiefs did, too. Spending Sundays at Arrowhead felt like a waste. “A financial investment and time investment,” she says, “that we weren’t necessarily benefiting from.” So she stayed home, and many others did, too. The Chiefs lost 38 games in three seasons, and they were blacked out on local television last December for the first time in two decades. Kansas City was losing, and worse, it was losing interest in the Chiefs. “You’ve just got to understand,” Waters says, “that so many people here base their Mondays off of what we do on Sundays. “This is the city’s heartbeat. Chiefs football is the city’s heartbeat.” When Wiegmann re-signed with the Chiefs this past offseason, a young teammate approached the 37-year-old veteran and asked which stadium was the NFL’s toughest. The loudest, rowdiest, craziest stadium he’d ever experienced. Wiegmann said Arrowhead, and the youngster had a hard time believing it. The Chiefs’ core, players who have been in the league three seasons or fewer, have never known Arrowhead as anything more than a place where a ticket buys little more than disappointment. They heard the stories about how Kansas City had embraced football and how Arrowhead’s parking lots used to be packed on Sundays. But reality didn’t match the legend. “I heard a lot about it,” says Dorsey, who was drafted by the Chiefs in 2008. “It was two rough years.” Then the 2010 season began, and the Chiefs defeated San Diego on national television. The Chiefs beat Cleveland, too. Last Sunday, the 49ers seemed to have no chance. The team had its city’s attention again. “It’s different. Everybody is patting you on the back and stuff like that,” Dorsey says. “They’re getting excited about us again.” Fankhauser says her son watched the Chargers game on television and remembered the old feeling of watching a winner. Tyler’s own son began asking about the Chiefs, too. Tyler said something to his mother recently. “Too bad you don’t have tickets anymore,” she says he told her. ••• When Haley is on a flight that travels over the Missouri River, that’s when he thinks about the hold a football team has on its city. From above, the water is brown and looks lifeless, and instead of boats and riverfront attractions, there is only the occasional industrial plant or casino. Pittsburgh used to look like that, too. That’s Haley’s hometown, and he remembers when the Monongahela River was dull, and few residents cared to venture downtown. Then the Steelers started winning, and Pittsburgh wanted to show itself off, improve its riverfront appearance, make downtown a place worth visiting. Now, Pittsburgh is a vibrant city with rivers packed with boats and fishermen. Haley says he sees the same potential for Kansas City. “Our ultimate goal is the Super Bowl,” he says. “We have to get to be a good team, and then take it from there.” Haley said he can’t get ahead of himself or the difficulty of turning a 3-0 start into a season-long success story. But the man can’t help but think sometimes about how Kansas City might respond if the Chiefs become one of America’s best teams. He says there’s a correlation between a team’s success and its city’s mood. “The team is the catalyst for making great strides,” he says. “I know how it felt. I know how I felt when the Steelers lost, the whole week. It was the worst. How quick could Sunday come? School sucked. Everything. It sucked. Sucked. It wasn’t fun. But when they won, man, what a great week.” He admits that it’ll take time, and he’s aware that change comes slowly. It took three years for Kansas City to get over the Chiefs; a reconciliation won’t happen overnight. In that barbershop in North Kansas City, the owner, Alex Castro, is among the skeptics. But he’s willing to give the Chiefs a chance. “It’s been the same thing,” he says during a slow moment. “Next year, next year. Well, maybe this is the year.” Fankhauser has put a deposit on 2011 season tickets. She says she’s not sure how her plans will change if the Chiefs don’t continue making improvements. Waters says he understands that enthusiasm will be slow to rebuild. He says he was surprised this past Sunday to look into the stands and see thousands of empty seats. “Five years ago,” he says, “that stadium would have been just a sea of red, with people in the seats. It’s getting back, but it’s not where it was.” The economy hasn’t fully recovered, and people are more careful with their money. Besides, who knows if the Chiefs’ fast start is a sign of future glory, or simply the latest cruel twist in these years of heartbreak? Waters says he’s curious to see how Kansas City responds if the Chiefs continue winning — or if they lose a game or two. “That’ll be a true test for everybody,” he says. “For us and how we’re able to bounce back, and for our fans and community. “As you continue to win, the doubts continue to go away.” ••• Vernon Morris sits in the shade at a bus stop in Independence. He’s waiting for a bus to take him home, but while he waits, he doesn’t mind talking some football. He’s not a Chiefs fan, but he has heard plenty about them. “I like good football,” he says. “Chiefs are three-and-oh, huh?” He’s not proud of this, but Morris spent 20 months in the U.S. Penitentiary at Leavenworth for illegal drug distribution. It was inside that the Illinois native heard about the team that played at Arrowhead, the team that was down on its luck for a while, that once determined Kansas City’s weekly mood. Morris, 42, was released last November. In the time since, he has enrolled at Vatterott College. He says he believes in second chances. “And third chances,” he says with a smile. “And fourth.” He says he learned at Leavenworth that the true Chiefs fans are willing to give their team unlimited chances. The Chiefs might break their fans’ hearts, but the loyal ones are always willing to come back. Since he’s been out, Morris says he has learned how important the Chiefs are to Kansas City. He sees the reminders all over town, and he says these last few weeks are the first time he has seen what the old crowd was talking about. He gets calls sometimes now, from men he met inside, and they want to talk about the Chiefs’ hot start, and how the playoffs don’t look so impossible anymore. Morris says he knows he doesn’t represent all Kansas Citians, or even most. But he is a Kansas Citian now, and he says that all the recent chatter has made him curious. He says he wants to know more about the team that people care this much about, that can make people this happy, feel this united, just by winning a handful of games. He adjusts himself, and his feet dangle over the wall and are touched by the sun. “Sometimes you’ve got to start from the bottom again,” he says. “That’s what they gotta do now. “I’m going to try to get to a game and see them live. It makes me want to be a part of what’s going on.”
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#14 |
trap champ
Join Date: Mar 2009
Casino cash: $10004900
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So to sum it up,
Kc is full of fair weather fans.
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#15 |
Busy in a Kohl's restroom
Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: Milk/Honey/Gazland
Casino cash: $1747293
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DAMMIT CARL!!!
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You seem nice! |
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