Now i have to say i care less one way or another but found it interesting people on this forum where bagging Dockers supporters for giving loud cheers when our players missed shots at goal,and fair enough too imo,but on the other hand every time a lion kicked a point on sat night there was a huge roar,what do people think is it all in good fun or just plain bad sportsmanship?
cheering behinds
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Normally I don't but I did when Hart missed his.I was getting jack of all the frees in front of goal Bris were getting.I only cheer when the opposition gets a free in front of goal due to awful umpiring and they stuff it.It is more of a thank you to the footy gods.Comment
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Re: cheering behinds
Originally posted by daniel f
Now i have to say i care less one way or another but found it interesting people on this forum where bagging Dockers supporters for giving loud cheers when our players missed shots at goal,and fair enough too imo,but on the other hand every time a lion kicked a point on sat night there was a huge roar,what do people think is it all in good fun or just plain bad sportsmanship?Captain Logic is not steering this tugboat.
"[T]here are things that matter more and he's reading and thinking about them: heaven, reincarnation. Life and death are the only things that are truly a matter of life and death. Not football."Comment
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Originally posted by Damien
The swans crowd can be quite unsportsmanlike when tensions are high. As I think most home crowds are.
I don't really care to be honest.
As long as I never hear a crowd cheer an injury or such, I can handle a bit of bad sportmanship.The Destructive Dan Experience - Featuring Teal.
Add me on Facebook - Danny Pinsuti (Except Suzi Olsen and her split personalities.)
238 AFL Games.Comment
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i rest my voice when they shoot at goal..
i always cheer the swans
eg voss has the ball and is chased by maxfield id be cheering maxfield to catch him as oppossed to booing vossTheres not much left to sayComment
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Originally posted by Rizzo
I only boo a goal from the opposition if it comes off a dodgy free.Captain Logic is not steering this tugboat.
"[T]here are things that matter more and he's reading and thinking about them: heaven, reincarnation. Life and death are the only things that are truly a matter of life and death. Not football."Comment
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Re: Re: cheering behinds
Originally posted by NMWBloods
I think cheering when the opposition misses a goal isn't the same as booing when they score a goal.
I think this was the point we were discussing as a result of the West Coast and Port games. I don't remember any comment being made on behinds, it was mainly directed towards booing a legit goal ie; non umpire assisted. We don't get those so it would have been a mute argument.Here's my heart and you can break it
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Love and peaceComment
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Cheering an oppo behind is (relatively) good sportsmanship...we are happy, why shouldn't we cheer. It's not as if we are booing a legitimate an opposition goal (a la Fremantle) .Same as cheering a free kick in our favour."I'll acknowledge there are more talented teams in the competition but I won't acknowledge that there is a better team in the competition" Paul Roos March 2005Comment
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I love it when our opponents miss their shots at goal. Especially when I've put them off by waving a flag.
We give them a big "EEEEEEEEOOOOORE! EEEEEEEOOOOORE!" a la Tottenham fans liking Tony Adams to a donkey after missing another shot on goal playing for the Arse. It would be awesome when 3000 people used to do it at Spirit matches.
That is not being unsportsmanlike at all. It is part of being a barracker, making your opponent feel worse for missing his shot at goal.
JF"Never ever ever state that Sydney is gone.They are like cockroaches in the aftermath of a nuclear war"
(Forum poster 'Change', Big Footy 04Apr09)Comment
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