sp6r=underrated wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:
Let's draw a distinction here:
1. Tired of the monotony of one team always winning? Makes sense when one team keeps winning every year, like the Bulls circa '92-93 or '97-98, but not in '95-96.
2. Tired of your team losing, and not wanting a contender to make a comeback because you don't want to lose to them again even though it's been a while since you dealt with that? Cool, but that's not monotony, that's just being a bitter fan.
So if what you're saying is that such statements are simply about bitter fans now having a place to voice their bitterness, there's truth to it, but I think people need to get some perspective when most people who think "not the Warriors again" are the same people who said "the Warriors are done!" a long time ago.
Completely disagree and I think you're making a very uncharitable reading of people of the Warriors since you like watching them play.
A lot of people who said "Warriors are done" were really saying "I hope the Warriors are done and am going to interpret ambiguous data as saying they are done"
And a 2 year reprieve isn't much. The idea that the clock should instantly re-set is naive. It is the exact same core, sans Durant that has been going around since 2015. If you're someone who likes to see new teams constantly cycle on the scene it isn't being "bitter fans" it is just people who want variety.
You dislike watching Harden/Luka ball. If one of them played on a team that dominated for half decade, disappeared for 2 years and cameback with the same core would you really say "hey here are some fresh faces" or would you say "oh god this sucks
Ah well, I'd be inclined to say I process things pretty differently. I'm not a good fan. As an Angeleno Laker fan I spent more time telling fellow Laker fans the issues I saw with the club even as they won championships. When the Lakers lost to the Pistons I was glad, but not because I was tired of seeing the Lakers in the finals, but because I liked the attitude of the Pistons players better than the guys on my team. That might seem like a minor difference to others, and I'll acknowledge some similarity in the sense that prior years fed into my perception of that year...but a brand new contender can absolutely draw my ire in a similar way.
I would disagree with you that the gap from 2019 to 2022 isn't a long time for most fans.
On the other hand, I think it's clear that if you learn to hate a team, there's no amount of time that would make you glad to see them back on top.
When I call people "bitter fans", it might just sound like a personal attack, but the reality is that it marks them as something of a special hard-core group. For those who are less invested in one happens in any given year, and who tend to get drawn in by storylines that they have some grasp on, seeing old teams come back again generally adds to their interest more so than watching two random teams that aren't likely to be back again.