Boo Your Home Team at Your Own Peril

Chicago Cubs pitcher Carlos Zambrano was booed by his hometown fans yesterday after another poor outing and he was not happy about it. He criticized the fans in a post-game interview and promised that he would remember their behavior, and presumably hold a grudge against them. I agree with Zambrano completely. Booing your own team is insane! Fans who boo their home teams generally get what they deserve: an underachieving team.

Some fans believe it is their right to boo the home team, a right guaranteed by virtue of holding a valid ticket. They boo when the athlete fails to do his or her “job” as defined by the fan. However, the fans who boo the home team are not doing their “jobs” either.
In most team sports, there is a demonstrable home field advantage. Teams typically play better and win more in their home facility than they do on the road. This rule is so consistent that Las Vegas odds makers give the home team “credit” in point-spreads simply for being at home.

Why? This advantage is not created by the rules of the game or the particulars of the playing surface but the energy the players receive by playing before supportive fans. Conversely, the less support a team receives from the home crowd, the less likely the team is to play well and the more likely fans will be motivated to withhold support or worse, to boo. How ironic?

By “hating on” the home team, those fans are more likely to get more of the performance they hate. So, why boo?

Fans that boo their home teams not only hurt their teams that day, but they damage the prospects in the future as well. New York Yankees fans may feel the sting of their own bad behavior this winter. Yankees fans did their best to destroy the confidence of their third baseman Alex Rodriguez last season. For committing the unpardonable sin of hitting “only” 35 home runs and driving in “only” 121 runs, and in their opinion under-performing under his big contract, A-Rod was booed mercilessly in Yankee Stadium last year. The impact? Rodriguez, who has returned to his former Unquestioned-Best-Player-in-the-Game status, will likely either opt out of his contract and take his game to the competition after this season or hijack the Yankees for an even bigger contact that could limit even the Yankees’ ability to sign other players. There will be no “hometown discount” for the Yankees.

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Article Author: Brian McClellan

Brian McClellan is the cofounder and CEO of BAMSTRONG Presentations, the author of The Real Bling: How to Get the Only Thing You Need, a Sherian Publishing title, and a powerful motivational speaker. To learn more about Brian, please visit …

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  • 1 - nicolas

    Sep 06, 2007 at 11:30 am

    i think that booing just to boo is stupid, but if i pay my money to go to a baseball game (especially at some of the exorbitant prices that are out there) and a supposedly elite player (like zambrano) does not perfrom at an elite level, then i am justified in showing my displeasure with his lack of performance.

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