Any map freaks out there? Anyone looking for a sports map of the
US you can play Risk on? You want a fascinating look at sports
allegiances in the fringes of this country? Check out the maps of sports fandom.
Begun this past September, the Common Census Map Project
is an attempt to define the US by geographic and cultural
allegiances. From the main page you can alert the project to your
hometown, the city closest to your hometown, and the big city nearest
that city. It’s like a Wikipedia-census, an open source account of
where people are in America and where they consider themselves “from.”
The
map doesn’t adjust itself, though, with each respondent. Instead, the
archivists wait until certain response thresholds have been met. It
makes fascinating reading, though, as visitors to the site can see what
the census map looked like after 4,000 responses, 8,000 responses, 16,000 responses, and the current one which represents 24,000 responses. The next version will be published after 32,000 votes, which should happen shortly after this article publishes.
And
as I mentioned in the teaser paragraph, the project also charts the
sports allegiances of respondents. The site has maps for the fan bases
of the NFL, MLB, NBA, NHL, and NCAA I-A football.
And for whatever reason, these maps are updated far more frequently
than the main project’s map. Obviously, these maps have some serious
flaws, most notably the lack of representative data from across the
country. Currently, the votes are skewed heavily toward the northeast,
as witnessed by the fact that, as of this writing, Boston College football has more votes of allegiance than the University of Miami and Florida State combined.
I need a stand-alone sentence to emphasize how stupid that is.
Nonetheless,
these maps offer a pretty cool look at regional loyalties. Each one
allows users to look closely, within a fifty mile diameter, at what
allegiances people in particular areas hold.
On the college football map, for example, the plurality of respondents in New Hampshire support Boston College, but Notre Dame is close behind. Make’s sense: Notre Dame’s the most famous Catholic school in the country. And New Hampshire is largely Catholic, having gotten populated and papaled by French Canadians and Boston Irish.
Sure
BC, is Catholic too, but Notre Dame is far more famous and prestigious.
Heck, thirty years ago BC was on the verge of financial ruin; the
University of Massachusetts was planning on buying its campus for
UMass-Boston. And geographically, you’d think BC would leave Notre Dame
in the dust, but seriously – how long has BC had football? Pretty much
since Doug Flutie. Sure there was football before at BC, but it doesn’t count. Kind of like all those guys who went to the USFL
and then went to the NFL; no one cares that Jim Kelly passed for over
5200 yards with the Houston Gamblers in 1984. And so BC wins out in the
fringes of its own market, but only barely.
Anomalies
like this assert themselves in every sport and all over the country. On
the NFL map, the Packers are most popular around Green Bay: Wisconsin,
the upper peninsula of Michigan, and western Iowa. Beyond that,
according to the map they receive the most ardent support from pockets
of rural Mississippi. This looks asinine to anyone who doesn’t pay
attention to the NFL, but those fans among us realize that those rural
Mississippians are cheering for one of their own – Brett Favre,
Gulfport's favorite son.
In the fringes of sports
fandom, without a major sports team nearby to hook our loyalties, other
factors become dominant. To whose farm system does our local minor
league team belong? What team drafted our favorite player from the
state university’s basketball team that unexpectedly went 20-6 last
year? What team does that local guy play for? Where geographic
proximity is the strongest pull of teams in the middle of major
markets, idiosyncratic randomness is often the strongest pull of teams
for people in the fringes.
Now look at the baseball
map. New York state is dominated by the Yankees, with pockets of
resisting Mets fans (give Steinbrenner time, though – eventually Selig
will let him liquidate those holdouts). But the middle of the state is
largely Red Sox fans. Why? How did so many Red Sox fans end up in the
Middle of Nowhere, NY?
The answer: college. Red Sox
allegiance dominates central New York because there are a ton of
liberal arts schools there that kids in New England fall over
themselves applying to. Every year, Syracuse, Hamilton, Colgate and
others attract thousands of young, die hard Red Sox fans to their
campuses. This shifts the balance of fandom.
This
particular issue – and actually, the Common Census Map Project in
general – brings up several key questions: What defines a media market?
Who populates those markets? What are the allegiances of those people
and -- last but certainly not least -- Where do markets end?
According to Nielsen’s Listing of Media Markets,
central New York essentially falls under two different media markets:
Syracuse (#76) and Utica (#166). But according to the project’s main
map, that area is pretty evenly divided between cultural ties to New
York City and Syracuse. Does that mean that the heart of the Syracuse
market is bleeding into the New York suburbs? Or is Syracuse simply a
media market in name only, and actually functions as a very organized
fringe to New York City?
And Utica is actually
smaller than Manchester, New Hampshire, yet receives its own media
market while Manch Vegas is officially tied to Boston. Is that to make
Boston feel better? Does Boston need to stuff a potato down its
population pants to compensate for a smaller than expected viewing
audience? Or is Utica the one being humored? (Which would, of course,
bring up the question: “Of whom does Utica have naked pictures that it
warrants being humored?”)
And what kind of market is
it, anyway, when most of those people don’t feel any loyalty to that
market? Boston could be said to have that problem too, as the city
attracts more college kids than almost anywhere, but manages to
counteract that by browbeating most of those students into cheering for
our sports teams, particularly the Red Sox. That clearly doesn’t happen
in central New York. Does that make it a typical or atypical example of
how things can be weird on the fringes of media markets?
Market
fringes aren’t easy to describe because they’re different everywhere.
What defines Mississippians’ loyalty to the Packers does not define
central New York’s loyalty to the Red Sox. In the center of media
markets, sports are easier to describe – Denver roots for the Broncos
because they’re right there. Same for Seattle and the Mariners. And
Long Island and the Islanders.
I admit that I’m
going to be writing more about New Hampshire and Boston than about the
fringes in other media markets. But every once in a while I intend to
return to the fringes of other markets and sports fandom in general,
just to see how others live there. The sports maps on the Common Census
Map Project are a good tool to do that, and since they’re updated so
frequently I might return sometimes to review how they’re progressing.
They hint at the complexities of sports fans in the outlands of TV,
radio and newspapers. The project shows apparent randomness, that
frequently doesn’t make sense, but at least it’s got cool maps to play
with. |