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| Readers' list: Things that must stop From the Page 2 mailbag | ||
Boy, are you irritated.
Earlier this week, Page 2 offered our list of 10 irritating things at sporting events that must stop immediately. We asked you to send us your irks, pet peeves and gripes and you overwhelmed our in-box with more than 3,100 responses. Check out our readers' top 10 below, and then vote in the poll at right to crown the No. 1 irritating thing that must stop ... now.
1. People talking on their cell phone behind home plate and then waving to the camera (203 letters)
The Sports Guy had it right when he said that someone should just walk up, grab the cell phone, throw it to the ground and stomp on it! It would be worth any fine or punishment. And would probably make it on SportsCenter ... and then the unfortunate fellow could call (from his home) and tell the same people he tried to call during the game that he is also the "official" idiot on SportsCenter! The morons behind home plate on cell phones must be dealt with, one way or another. If next week's List is "10 Most Useful Items to Implement at Sporting Events," here's my early entry: retractable screens behind the plate to allow pitchers to help maintain the integrity of the game by schooling these idiots with a "riding fastball."
Closed circuit to cell phone clowns and Terrell Owens -- act like you've been there, indeed.
Without a doubt, the most annoying sports practice is fans waving behind home plate on their cell phones. If I wanted to see idiots waving frantically, I would watch people attempt to skydive without a parachute.
2. The Tomahawk Chop (157 letters)
Richard St. George Pawtucket, R.I.
The Tomahawk Chop -- Except for the fact that it proves that you can get 50,000 people to act like idiots in unison.
3. Electronic admonitions to fans about when they should cheer (124 letters)
At UCLA, they actually have a person with signs to tell fans the next cheer. Forget originality, forget improvisation. And does he get paid? Are my tax dollars really going to some guy to hold up signs that say, "Feel Free to Clap Now"? I wholeheartedly agree with your complaint of scoreboards cuing the crowd to cheer. I first encountered this at the Nassau Coliseum at an Islanders game many years ago. As a diehard Rangers fan, I always laughed at how the Islander fans only knew when to cheer via the scoreboard.
It was, and still is, my contention that CLAP on the scoreboard is actually an acronym meaning to "Clap Like A Puppet."
4. The Wave (113 letters)
Eric Stoltz was popular the last time The Wave was cool. If I'm going to get off my butt during a sporting event it's going to be for one of three reasons -- to get a beer, to applaud something on the field or to get a beer.
5. Virtual ads (97 letters)
Abolish those phantom advertisements behind home plate during postseason games. The last thing I want to see is Roger Clemens' profile against a big bright yellow ad for "Shallow Hal." One of those profiles is enough.
Edward Moraghan East Rutherford, N.J.
6. Decked-out Raiders fans (83 letters)
7. Football coaches getting doused with Gatorade (78 votes)
There should be a law that no male over age 14 can bring a glove to a baseball game. If I can catch a ball at a game (I'm 5-foot-5 and a girl -- and I've done it!), then so can you.
If I am ever elected to public office, I promise to make this my legacy.
9. Halftime interviews with coaches (44 votes)
The next time a coach offers any substantive thoughts in one of those interviews, it will be the first time.
10. TV cutaways and interviews with athlete's families (35 votes)
Let's also not forget the disturbing shots of Martin Brodeur's wife wearing an ugly cowboy hat during the 2000 Stanley Cup finals. Those two are only subordinate to the display of Kurt Warner's wife in the 1999 Super Bowl. Marshall Faulk is one of my favorite players, but I have to root against the Rams this year just in the hopes of preventing Fox from airing 55 shots of Mrs. Warner's 10-year-old boy haircut!
Honorable mention
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