on โ21-03-2015 10:23 PM
.........that compels people to attend major league football games at a stadium in their thousands?
on โ22-03-2015 12:05 AM
its a footy match, not a bull fight.
death on the footy field is not what fans want to see - they want to see their team play duh!
on โ22-03-2015 12:06 AM
here is an interesting study now tell me again that my chosen sport is dangerous
http://www.nisu.flinders.edu.au/pubs/reports/2007/injcat103.pdf
on โ22-03-2015 12:08 AM
Pretty violent display don't you think Pepe?
on โ22-03-2015 12:09 AM
no i don't think footy is violent.
on โ22-03-2015 12:13 AM
on โ22-03-2015 12:15 AM
In 2004โ05, there were 14,147 hospitalisations resulting from injuries received while playing some form of football. This represented 30.6% of all sports and leisure-related hospitalisations during this period.
Not violent well where did the injuries come from ?
14,147 hospitalisations in a single year???
on โ22-03-2015 12:16 AM
@poddster wrote:22 grown men fighting over an inflated bit of pigskin to be put between 2 upright sticks at one end or the other, and when that is done half the people cheer and then it is taken back to the middle of the field and the fight starts all over again.
Is that all there is to it?
No.
If you see a game between two teams who are well matched with physical skills, mental agility comes into it. It can be like a chess match with an elegance of thought and a fluidity of form akin to ballet. In AFL at least. I have not seen any other form of football for an entire game.
For the spectator there is plenty to it. A form of social bonding with their mates. A bond between parents and kids; remembering their first match as they take their children out to theirs, in turn. Friendly rivalry with opposition fans on the way to the game.
The roar of the crowd, becoming as one and forgetting their everyday problems.
on โ22-03-2015 12:17 AM
@poddster wrote:
@am*3 wrote:Can you not accept other people have different interests to yours?Of course I can, and what makes you think differently?
The 22 on the field are getting exercise but what of the thousands of others who sit or stand and watch?
That was my question , what motivates them?
The chance if seeing an injury or death perhaps?
maybe a chance to see their heroes in the flesh, and an opportunity to get their siggie
on โ22-03-2015 12:21 AM
Not to forget the after-match drunken punch-ups, that would be pretty memorable ๐
โ22-03-2015 12:22 AM - edited โ22-03-2015 12:23 AM
There is no need to demean what is not to your personal taste. I have yet to see any drunken punchups. Drinking is quite moderate at the AFL. It is in the main a family event.