Archive for the 'Tampa Bay Buccaneers' Category

VIDEO: LeGarrette Blount Meets Super Mario

LeGarrette Blount, Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Video 1 Comment »

There is not a lot going on in the Raysiverse. Sure, we could point you in the direction of yet another piece talking about what a collosal failure Dioner Navarro has been. Or we could tell you that Scott Kazmir will pitch in the Dominican Republic to try and save his career.

But really, we would rather just show you this cool mash-up of LeGarrette Blount’s touchdown run against the Packers. Because, for just a few moments yesterday, Blount gave us hope.

Here is the video (via SportsGrid.com)…

Rays Surpass Bucs As Most Popular Team In Bay Area

Rays Fans, Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Tampa Bay Lightning 8 Comments »

According to a recent study, the size of the Rays fanbase increased a little more than one percent to 1.50 million fans. That makes the Rays the most popular team in town right now. You can see the data below. Click over to Tom Jones’ story to read more and see how the data was compiled. [TampaBay.com]

The Continued Struggle for the Soul of the Florida Sports Fan

Attendance, Fans do silly things, Feed your mind, Minor League Affiliates, New York Yankees, Season Ticket Sales, Statistical projection, Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Tampa Bay Lightning, Tampa Bay Rays, Tampa vs St Pete, The Trop, Things that make us giddy, Things that shine a little less, TV Ratings, We are mad as hell, We need more Cowbell, Your thoughts please 12 Comments »

Jordi Scrubbings is back with his take on Rays attendance…

Last year, I wrote an article for this site entitled “The Battle for the Passion of the Florida Sports Fan”. In that article, I explored how the Rays were at the short end of a fight to get attention in a rapidly expanding Florida sports scene.

This year I have continued to track attendance and viewing trends. I have saved almost every post I can find from this site, other Rays sites, Bucs sites, Florida Minor League Baseball sites, and anywhere else that talks about the comings and goings of Florida sports fans.

Before I begin to dissect the year in attendance trends, I first want to share an interesting tidbit I recently discovered.

Did you know that in 2010 the Rays drew 95% of the combined attendance total of the Bulls, Gators, Hurricanes, and Seminoles last year?

Attendance of every 2010 home game of Florida State University, University of Florida, University of Miami, University of Central Florida, and the University of South Florida at their respective stadiums was 2,087,026. This number excludes only UF’s bowl game in Tampa and the UF vs. Georgia game in Jacksonville, as they were not true “home” games.

According to Baseball-Reference, the 2010 Rays drew 1,864,999 people to Tropicana Field in 2010. And another 112,854 during the playoffs. That’s 1,977,853 people and a 95% correlation. Which means almost the same amount of people that went to Rays games last year went to see a game at one of the five major college football programs in Florida.

There is no doubt Florida is still a college football state.

A lot of people would point to the above statistic and say it should be Exhibit A why the Rays should move from Florida – they can’t possibly compete in the Florida sports culture landscape. Baseball will regarded as a novelty especially as the University of South Florida grows in popularity and prominence and Florida State gets back on track, loses to Oklahoma withstanding.

I, of course, disagree.

Last year I argued that there was an oversaturation of Read the rest of this entry »

The ‘Drunkfest’ At Bucs Games Is A Problem

Tampa Bay Buccaneers 5 Comments »

Roy Cummings of the Tampa Tribune recently appeared on “Fabulous Sports Babe Show” (ESPN AM 1040). The Sports Babe asked him about the concerns of some fans that Bucs games are no longer a family friendly atmosphere.

Cummings agreed saying the games are “basically a drunkfest” and that he is not sure he would take a 10-year old to one of the games (you can read a transcript of the entire discussion at our brothers-from-another-mother JoeBucsFan.com).

We have season tickets but Read the rest of this entry »

The Battle for the Passion of the Florida Sports Fan

Attendance, Barack Obama, Minor League Affiliates, Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Tampa Bay Lightning, Tampa Bay Rays, Tampa Bay Rowdies 10 Comments »

On August 3rd, 1980 more than 16,000 people packed Tampa Stadium for the “Last Tango in Tampa”, a Championship Wrestling of Florida event featuring the best wrestlers of the day. Through a sweltering heat – the air was “hot and heavy” according to announcer Gordon Solie – fans watched legends such as Andre the Giant, Nikolai Volkof, and Dusty Rhodes duke it out in the squared circle. According to the Tampa Sports History blog, fans “came from all corners of the state” to see the show and be part of what was then the largest crowd to see a professional wrestling show in the State of Florida.

Besides record-setting wrestling crowds, 1980 was a good year in the turnstiles for other Tampa-area sports clubs. While the Tampa Bay Bucs were drawing over an average of 62,000 per game, the Tampa Bay Rowdies, the local professional soccer club, were also setting their franchise attendance season record. The sports fever wasn’t exclusive to Tampa either, as the Florida State Seminoles were also averaging nearly 52,000 per game, a surprising 101% of their stadium capacity, and over 125,000 people sat in the bleachers to watch the Daytona 500.

With two pro teams and three college football powerhouses (FSU, UF, and the University of Miami), there was no doubt in 1980 Florida was a football state that dabbled in soccer, pro wrestling, and the occasional NASCAR race.

As the population of Florida exploded from 9.7 million in 1980 to 18.5 million in 2010, so too did its sports climate. While Championship Wrestling of Florida folded (only to return as Florida Championship Wrestling in 2007) and the Rowdies folded (only to return in 2008), nearly a half-dozen major league teams joined the fold. The state is now home to a third NFL team, two NHL teams, two NBA teams, and two Major League Baseball teams. And that does not include representatives in the Arena Football League, the XFL, the Senior Professional Baseball League, the Lingerie Football League, numerous minor league hockey teams, a gaggle of minor league basketball teams, and an alphabet soup of professional wrestling organizations. And the Florida State League is still alive and well. And the University of South Florida is now a force to be reckoned with on the state college football scene.

Strictly from a major professional sport perspective, whereas there was once only two teams (the Bucs and Dolphins) for slightly less than 10 million people, there are now nine major professional sports teams (the Bucs, Dolphins, Jaguars, Magic, Heat, Lightning, Panthers, Marlins, and Rays) for under 19 million people.

Earlier this week, New York Times best-selling author Malcolm Gladwell explored the difference between passive support and passionate, active support, particularly as it pertains to online communities.  Whereas Gladwell peered into the world of social media as the platform of his examination, he could have easily looked into any group of people spread too thin trying to follow too many things. Although programs such as Facebook, Twitter, Myspace, and YouTube are great for getting out messages or receiving and following messages from a group of people, as Gladwell postulates, actions based on these social media messages are rare.

How fitting then that one of this week’s major admonishments of the active support of the Tampa Bay Rays came via social media – posted on my Twitter feed ironically somewhere between Lightning pre-season scores and press release statements from the Bucs coaching staff.

But David Price wasn’t the only public figure lamenting lack of active support.  On the same day Price and Evan Longoria called out the people of the Tampa Bay area, Orlando Sentinel writer Andrew Carter stated that average attendance to Florida State football games had dropped drastically from over 80,000 in 2006 to barely over 60,000 in 2010, a nearly 20% decrease. Granted, the performance of the Florida State Seminoles had been lackluster at best over the last decade, but this season was supposed to bring new hope in the presence of new head coach Jimbo Fisher and Heismann Trophy candidate Christian Ponder.

Meanwhile, on the exact same day the Rays and Orlando Sentinel stated their claims, President Obama likewise called out his Democratic support base, calling their apathy “inexcusable”. This from the same president with 5.5 million twitter followers and who was widely praised for his ability to utilize the Web in the 2008 elections.

So is apathy a local dilemma, a regional calamity, or a national trend? Read the rest of this entry »

St. Pete Mayor Says Bucs Prove Tampa Does Not Guarantee More Fans

Attendance, Bill Foster, New Stadium, Tampa Bay Buccaneers 18 Comments »

How much of a role does the economy play in the lack of attendance at Rays games? St. Pete Mayor Bill Foster thinks it plays a huge role and he points to the Bucs non-sellout on Sunday as evidence

“There’s no reason, of all 16 games, that opening day isn’t sold out. That does send a message that people don’t have that expendable dollar any longer,” said mayor Bill Foster…The current recession is seldom mentioned in public discussion but Foster said “It’s not being overlooked in my conversation, especially my conversation with the Rays organization.”

We are sure the economy has something to do with attendance at Rays games. But if it was the biggest factor, then Mayor Foster is admitting that St. Pete will only support the Rays when they are winning. Back in 2006 and 2007 when fans still had disposable income, they still weren’t going to Rays games.

What Was First Pro Sports Franchise To Use ‘Tampa Bay’?

Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Tampa Bay Rowdies 22 Comments »

An interesting question arose in the comments last week while discussing the Rays use of “Tampa Bay” and whether they would ever switch to the “Tampa Rays” or “Florida Rays.” Specifically, we wondered which pro sports team was the first to use the moniker “Tampa Bay” in order to represent a more regional fan base.

The Tampa Bay Rowdies of the North American Soccer League were the first professional sports team to use “Tampa Bay” during an official game, having played their inaugural season in 1975. That was one year prior to the debut of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. However, Tampa was awarded the expansion football franchise in 1974, the same year Tampa was awarded an expansion soccer franchise.

So which team was first to be named “Tampa Bay”? Let’s dig a little deeper…

Tampa was awarded an NFL franchise in
Read the rest of this entry »

Postgame Shot Of Joe: Baseball’s Holy Trinity

Albert Pujols, Carlos Pena, Gabe Kapler, Grant Balfour, James Shields, Matt Joyce, MFIKY!, St. Pete Times, Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Tampa Tribune, Uncategorized, Wade Davis 18 Comments »

Joe is so giddy over the Rays win he doesn’t know where to begin? It was the Holy Trinity of baseball tonight: pitching, defense and a key hit.

* Wade Davis: Was this his best outing? Hard to argue. Once he got past the first, he was simply dominant. Joe has written before Davis could carry the Rays a long way until/unless James “No Game” Shields has proven he has put his awful pitching woes behind him.

Joe cannot write just how great that is to see a No. 4 pitcher come out against a team with the best record in baseball and shut them down for six innings. As strong as the Rays bullpen is, Rays pitchers only need to get through seven innings.

Nice job Wade! Keep it up!

* While Joe has been a bit difficult on Carlos Pena at times for his penchant for imitating Rob Deer with his strikeout-or-homer offense, Joe has never wavered that Pena is one of the best defensive first basemen in baseball and maybe the best.

Pena diving to his right and throwing Read the rest of this entry »

The Legacy of Carl Crawford

Carl Crawford, Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Tampa Bay Lightning, Tampa vs St Pete 12 Comments »

Last Tuesday, on the same night he felt the collective sympathy of all male-kind, Carl Crawford celebrated the eighth anniversary of his major league debut.

Following his inconspicuous 1-for-4 debut on a 78-degree summer night in Toronto in 2002, Carl Crawford became an oddity in the dome of little talent. Through the years, he became our first home-grown star – the first selected to the all-star game for his merit, not just because someone had to be there in a Devil Rays cap.  He was the first Devil Ray to consistently lead the league in something positive – the only shining piece amongst Naimoli-funded scrap heaps until Scott Peterson claimed he could fix Victor Zambrano in five minutes. But whereas Scott Kazmir and his strikeouts put butts in the seats, Carl Crawford and his stolen bases never drew public enthusiasm. Perhaps because stolen bases are often the first prize of expansion teams searching for a quick buzz. Many a pitiful team has put a speedster on their roster in the hope he steals a base or two. Chuck Carr owes his Marlins career to this practice.

As time progressed and the franchise metamorphasized from perennial chum to a well-oiled machine that could play havoc with Empires and stymie the dominance of Nations, Crawford was forged into the leader of the new respectable Rays. He was the model of consistency, a piece to build a dream on.

Rarely however is a slap-hitting speedster the type of player to bring a team from worst to first. That title normally goes to cornerstone first basemen like Albert Pujols or once-in-a-generation moundsmen such as Stephen Strasburg. Keeping Crawford was the Sternberg Regime’s first declaration of unorthodoxy.

While the Rays exercised the Devil and began to win more often, Crawford began Read the rest of this entry »

Are The Bucs The Next Rays?

Tampa Bay Buccaneers No Comments »

The Tampa Bay Bucs have spent the least amount of money on players salaries in the last 5 years. So are the Glazers just being cheap or is there a method to their madness? Joe Bucs Fan looks at one writer’s speculation that the Bucs are just modeling their business after the Tampa Bay Rays. [Joe Bucs Fan]