Every now and then something idiotic happens on the Philadelphia sports scene that takes on a life of its own. The fact that not one, but two idiots in consecutive days hopped the fence and went for a joy run in the outfield at Phillies games doesn’t help. Sprinkle in the accusation of toothless Flyers’ Goon Daniel Carcillo that Bruins’ Center Marc Savard bit his finger in a scrum, you have a Gong Show.
But here’s my beef. By the time the stories exit the orbit of Philly, the context of what happened, and a description of what Philadephia and its fans are like is totally out of whack. An esteemed Boston radio voice today called Philadelphia a ”cess pool” among other things. Predictably his on-air partner brought up the tired “they booed Santa Claus” story. They are not pioneers. So many others have said it too. Being provocative makes for good radio. But let’s please set the record straight. Philly fans didn’t just boo Santa Claus, they threw snowballs at him too. They booed the Easter Bunny. 
Philly is the toughest place in the world to play pro sports. Sorry New York and Boston, it’s not even close. Donovan McNabb and Mike Schmidt apologists bemoan the booing of their heroes. Here’s the deal: Philly fans are tough, but fair. You get out of them what you put into it. And it’s not always about success. It’s about hustling and caring. Look at Bobby Clarke, Ron Jaworski, Moses Malone and Aaron Rowand. If you whine and show even a hint of apathy, you’re toast. Wait a minute, make that scrapple. Donovan McNabb and Mike Schmidt come to mind.
For someone who was born and raised there, and has spent ample time in other places, I am the voice of reason. Philadelphia is an interesting place. I intentionally used the word orbit two paragraphs above because Philly is truly a different planet. It’s very parochial. People love and protect their own. They have little tolerance for outsiders who don’t embrace the place. Philadelphia went 25 years without a title. That’ll make just about anyone crusty. I’m not defending, just explaining. Philly folks don’t need anyone else’s approval. They know they’re a little crazy and apologize for nothing. Philadelphia is not for everyone, but for those who live there, there’s no other place they’d rather live.




















Subscribe