
See more detail on their data collection here
https://www.facebook.com/notes/facebook-data-science/nfl-fans-on-facebook/10151298370823859
Thoughts? Surprises?

ts1227;1377188 wrote:
See more detail on their data collection here
https://www.facebook.com/notes/facebook-data-science/nfl-fans-on-facebook/10151298370823859
Thoughts? Surprises?
My thoughts as well. Bandwagonism in a nutshell.Commander of Awesome;1377197 wrote:lot of bandwagon fans out there.
Ironman92;1377218 wrote:Can you Cleveland fans explain the mass of Browns fans somewhere just a little north of Marietta when everything around them is Steelers.
Is there something I'm missing or are they just the true I live in Ohio and I'm closer to Cleveland than Cincy and every Ohio resident around us are complete bandwagoners.
I think the map is pretty interesting.
Bangwagonism is a nationwide epidemic.Hb31187;1377338 wrote:This breaks the OC golden rule of having to root for the closest team to you. Oh no
Athens - as you approach the town on 33 there is a highway adoption sign noting its sponsor as the Athens County Browns Backers (or something similar).Ironman92;1377218 wrote:Can you Cleveland fans explain the mass of Browns fans somewhere just a little north of Marietta when everything around them is Steelers.
Is there something I'm missing or are they just the true I live in Ohio and I'm closer to Cleveland than Cincy and every Ohio resident around us are complete bandwagoners.
I think the map is pretty interesting.
Yes it is. But theres a fine line between bandwagon and simply liking a team not from your region. I dont think anyone would accuse a fan from Ohio who likes the Sacramento Kings to be a bandwagon fanGoChiefs;1377340 wrote:Bangwagonism is a nationwide epidemic.
I would, because they probably started liking them in the early 2000s. If you're not from the area, you can't like a team without being a bangwagoner. Plain and simple. Its like rooting for Canada in Olympic Hockey over USA when you live in Nebraska.Hb31187;1377345 wrote:Yes it is. But theres a fine line between bandwagon and simply liking a team not from your region. I dont think anyone would accuse a fan from Ohio who likes the Sacramento Kings to be a bandwagon fan
I guess it depends on how you define "from the area." I personally don't care who people root for as long as they're not obnoxious about it, but appreciate fans who have some connection to the geographic area a team is in a bit more. Like me, for example, born in Minnesota and living in Chicago, and liking zero local teams:Commander of Awesome;1377405 wrote:I would, because they probably started liking them in the early 2000s. If you're not from the area, you can't like a team without being a bangwagoner. Plain and simple. Its like rooting for Canada in Olympic Hockey over USA when you live in Nebraska.
Bolded the important part. Vikings, Twins, Timberwolves.gorocks99;1377410 wrote:I guess it depends on how you define "from the area." I personally don't care who people root for as long as they're not obnoxious about it, but appreciate fans who have some connection to the geographic area a team is in a bit more. Like me, for example, born in Minnesota and living in Chicago, and liking zero local teams:
Red Sox/Celtics: Picked up a strong liking toward them after living in Boston for 3 years. Had no prior strong MLB or NBA allegiance, having only cursorily followed the Twins and Timberwolves during my time in MN
Blue Jackets: Lived in Ohio when they got the team; had no other existing allegiances as I was a North Stars fan until they moved to Dallas.
Packers: My mom grew up in Milwaukee and I picked up my fandom from her. I did live in Madison for about a year but was a Packer fan long before that.
Gophers: Alma mater
So I wouldn't say I'm from Ohio, or from Wisconsin, or from Boston, but have connections to all those places.
I just used the Kings as a random team. I dont understand why you're so fiercely against rooting for teams that arent in your area. I understand your point if a person likes lets say...Lakers, Cowboys, Yankees and Red Wings. That id agree is a bandwagon fan to the extreme, but if a person just likes average teams not from his/her area, not sure how its bandwagoningCommander of Awesome;1377405 wrote:I would, because they probably started liking them in the early 2000s. If you're not from the area, you can't like a team without being a bangwagoner. Plain and simple. Its like rooting for Canada in Olympic Hockey over USA when you live in Nebraska.
It's not...at least when considering the definition of bandwagon fan.Hb31187;1377436 wrote:... but if a person just likes average teams not from his/her area, not sure how its bandwagoning
The OC definition seems to be, if you dont root for the team geographically closest to you, you're automatically a bandwagon fan lolCon_Alma;1377438 wrote:It's not...at least when considering the definition of bandwagon fan.
Commander of Awesome;1377405 wrote:I would, because they probably started liking them in the early 2000s. If you're not from the area, you can't like a team without being a bangwagoner. Plain and simple. Its like rooting for Canada in Olympic Hockey over USA when you live in Nebraska.
Native us american eh? You're a bandwagon fan if you dont root for the Blackhawks, Indians, Seminoles and RedskinsGOONx19;1377454 wrote:^ I'm a native U.S. American.
Hb31187;1377456 wrote:Native us american eh? You're a bandwagon fan if you dont root for the Iroquois, Apache or Cherokee.
Its not just OU students, almost Everyone I know from Athens Co. are Die Hard Browns fansts1227;1377323 wrote:Athens County. So, that's OU students (and they pull a lot of students from NE Ohio in)
+ Chiefs, Braves, and WarriorsHb31187;1377456 wrote:Native us american eh? You're a bandwagon fan if you dont root for the Blackhawks, Indians, Seminoles and Redskins