dans79 wrote: ↑19 Jul 2021, 13:02
Big Tea wrote: ↑19 Jul 2021, 12:41
I have to say I don't like the way F1 is going. It is so hyped up in the media that fans or even casual watchers can not just accept an incident an let it go.
You go to a boxing match and watch two guys thump each other and discuss it in a friendly manner after, or a rugby game where players are routinely mashed, but get back into it and have a beer with the opposing fans.
I really hope that it does not go as cricket began to at one time and take on football tribalism 100% for or 100% against no middle ground not ended when the whistle blows.*
*
This with apologies to the majority of football fans who are fine, but the minority get the publicity.
Imo, its because far to many of the younger fans have never participated in sports of any type. Participation in sports has been trending down significantly over the last 2 and a half decades or so. To many kids play nothing but video games now, and thus don't have a proper grasp on reality, sportsmanship, or what it's like to make split second decisions with major consequences.
Add in the extreme polarization effect of social media, and you get what we have today!
In the context of this race incident, it's pure tribalism looking for an emotional outlet. Max's fans feel aggrieved and have no outlet for that other than to make sweeping statements about everything from Hamilton's character to the character of a whole nation. So there's some lashing out happening. And then there was the simple racism from one or two now-banned contributors.
Had the incident been between Max and anyone else e.g. Leclerc, there would have been a lot of "wtf happened there?" comments but not nearly as much of the emotion. It's because it involved Max's only competitor this year that it is so emotive. I can guarantee that had it been someone taking out Hamilton there would have been a lot of smug comments from those same people. That's just the way it goes.
Nothing wrong with an emotional response. It just needs to be contextualised. And that means remembering that none of this matters a jot to anyone here. Sure, people are emotionally involved, but unless someone has bet their house on Max winning the title, none of it matters.
I had this same conversation in the pub with some England fans after the Euro final. Had to calm a few down and talk them through the fact that it doesn't matter. It's just a game of football. To see the emotion/hate drain from their expressions as they figured it out was quite something. They then wandered off disconsolate but no longer an emotional hand grenade.
Yes, we all want "our man", "out team", or whatever to win. But it doesn't actually matter. It has no bearing on our lives other than our own emotional response to it. and that's down to us and no one else.
If you are more fortunate than others, build a larger table not a taller fence.