Hey Jim, thanks for bringing up this topic again. Ever since I joined the board, I've tried to promote more CIS discussion by creating various CIS and Thunderbirds threads, with minimal success.Jim Mullin wrote:We are halfway through the CIS season, two-thirds of the way through the CJFL season and there's even a High School season going on and there is not a single thread on any amateur football topic.
Why is there such a gulf between amateur football and professional football in BC? It's certianly not the case in other communities.
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With slightly more interest with the city hosting the Vanier Cup for the first time:
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And I even created a BC High School thread one time, with no success.
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TheLionKing wrote:In my years at UBC I never attended a Thunderbird game because they were so damn bad. I still follow my alma mater but don't attend the games.
I never knew that you two attended UBC. So as former students and now alumni, do you have a strong affinity towards your alma mater, and were you ecstatic when UBC won their last Vanier Cup in 1997, the same way you would feel whenever the Lions win the Grey Cup?sj-roc wrote:I did my PhD at UBC and in my years there, I never once went to a T-birds game, nor do I know of anyone else who ever did so, with the possible exception of one or two Shrum Bowls (and as you imply, the people who go to Shrum Bowls generally don't go to watch a football game).
Did you buy much UBC paraphernalia from the bookstore?
And sj-roc, where did you attend your undergrad? How does that university compare to UBC with regards to interest or apathy for their sports teams?
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There is little interest in CIS basketball either and it seemed like the student body or alumni couldn't care less when the Thunderbirds made it to the 2009 Basketball finals, unlike students of an American college if their basketball team made it to the NCAA Final Four.
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It's always somewhat sensitive when talking about race and ethnicity, so speaking through generalizations and without beating around the bush....jcalhoun wrote:On top of that, there is a general resentment among the student body towards the athletics department, that is often articulated openly in upper level academic classes.
There is also a lot of Balkanization within the university itself. Not only between disciplines (Arts/Sciences, say) but along ethnic lines. I've seen reference to this sort of thing at UBC, and have seen it myself at SFU. There are communal areas on campus (cafeterias, study spaces, etc) where one rarely ever sees any minority groups, and others where you're surprised to ever hear English spoken.
Greater Vancouver has a very large Chinese-Canadian population along with some other Asian-Canadians communities, and in some places one can say they are the majority, and that may apply to both UBC and SFU as well (University of a Billion Chinese). And Chinese culture is one that emphasizes academics, and thus most of the Chinese-Canadian students are interested in studying and academics more than anything else and thus, they are apathetic in watching football. If they are interested in sports, it would be in sports in which the typical Chinese-Canadian might be more interested in playing (badminton, volleyball, etc.) So essentially, it's a demographics issue.
A few decades ago, the Richmond Colts were well known for its football team but the football program at Richmond Secondary ended in 2000 due to a shortage of players. An plausible reason is because most students are Asian-Canadian now who are not interested in playing high school football while those like Bryan Chiu are certainly the small exception.