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 by Elvis
9 years 6 months ago
 Total posts:   41516  
 Joined:  Mar 28 2015
United States of America   Los Angeles
Administrator

http://www.dailynews.com/sports/2015121 ... ome-finale

Bonsignore: San Diego Chargers fans face emotional home finale

Image

“Boltman” might have a hard time convincing fellow San Diego Chargers fans to have faith at Sunday’s final home game, which could be the team’s last in San Diego should it move to Los Angeles. (Stephen Dunn/Getty Images)

By Vincent Bonsignore, Los Angeles Daily News

POSTED: 12/14/15, 2:30 PM PST | UPDATED: 29 SECS AGO 0 COMMENTS

The text was from someone employed with the San Diego Chargers, sent to a friend associated with the team. It read, simply: “Your life savings is on the line. Are we playing in San Diego or Los Angeles next year?”

Talk about a risky proposition.

And no easy answer.

But as the Chargers and their fans approach what might be the last home game in San Diego Chargers history Sunday, uncertainty hovers over despair, which stands shoulder to shoulder with anger, disappointment, frustration and resentment.

“To think this might be it for the Chargers in San Diego, that’s incredibly sad,” said 30-year-old John Gennaro, who writes for the Chargers’ Bolts from the Blue blog and works for San Diego-based sports radio station the Mighty 1090. “And I think you’ll see a range of emotions expressed on Sunday.”

Rightfully so.

From the moment Barron Hilton moved his American Football League Chargers from Los Angeles to San Diego in 1961, the Bolts have been the crown jewel of sports in America’s Finest City.

From Lance Alworth to Ron Mix to John Hadl to Sid Gillman to Dan Fouts to Don Coryell to Kellen Winslow to Junior Seau to LaDainian Tomlinson right on up to Philip Rivers, the city of San Diego has rallied around their beloved Chargers. They are as much a part of the Southern California fabric as the Dodgers, Disneyland, Sunset Boulevard and the Gaslamp District.

But after Sunday, it might all melt away like a morning marine layer off the Pacific Coast shoreline.

And it’s left Chargers fans wondering exactly how to handle what could be the last home game in franchise history at 1:25 p.m. against the Miami Dolphins at Qualcomm Stadium.

And who and where to direct their emotions?

Is it Dean Spanos, who insists he’s fought the good fight trying to get a stadium deal done in San Diego, but has run out of options and has now turned his attention to Los Angeles?

Is it the political leaders in San Diego, who dropped one ball after another over the years and pushed Spanos into a corner so his only alternative was to plot a move to Los Angeles?

Or maybe it’s the National Football League, which drives hard bargains with its home markets, expecting them to foot a considerable amount of the bill on stadiums in order to keep their teams.

“There is a ton of blame to go around,” Gennaro said. “Starting primarily with the politicians, if not the current ones, the ones over the last 10 to 15 years. There were opportunities to make this work, but for whatever reasons, it was always mishandled.”

Meanwhile, the fans suffer. And as they tepidly wait for Sunday, they aren’t quite sure what their emotions will be.

“I think everyone is handling things in their own way,” said 51-year-old Rafael Alvarez, a season-ticket holder since 1992 and the head of Bolt Pride, a Chargers fan group. “We aren’t quite sure how this will all play out. We know Sunday’s game is the last home game of the season. But is it the last Chargers game in San Diego ever? It might be. And that is sad.”

On top of all that, there is apprehension.

A month before National Football League owners gather in Houston to presumably provide clarity, there is as as much uncertainty as ever.

The Chargers might get enough votes from fellow owners to move to Los Angeles, where they hope to build a stadium with the Oakland Raiders. Or maybe someone from the NFL will instruct them to make a deal with St. Louis Rams owner Stan Kroenke, who is proposing a stadium in Inglewood.

Or maybe none of the above happens, which means the Chargers stay in San Diego.

For the time being or perhaps permanently.

How the fans channel the emotion and uncertainty Sunday will be fascinating.

“I honestly don’t know how that will play out, but I do think we’ll probably see a split right down middle,” said Derek Togerson of NBC-TV San Diego “It will be a 50/50 funeral procession or a game like any other game, depending on how you see this playing out.

“And even the fans who think, ‘This is it, they are moving to L.A.,’ there will be a split. Half will approach it like, ‘It’s been a great run, thanks for the memories. Sad that you’re leaving and sad this will be the last chance I get to root for you.’ The other half will be like, ‘The heck with you, Spanos, for taking our team away from us.’ But then you have the fans who think this will all work out, the Chargers aren’t going anywhere, and this is just another game.”

If the Chargers actually do bolt to L.A. after spending the past 54 years in San Diego, they will do so coming off one of the worst seasons in franchise history.

As if adding insult to injury, they take a 3-10 record into Sunday’s game.

Which only complicates — or widens — the range of emotions.

“In many ways we’ve hit a low point,” said Scott Lewis, the editor-in-chief of the Voice of San Diego. “Look, we’ve had bad teams here in San Diego over the years. It’s a reality we’ve dealt with and are used to. But the losing combined with the negative feeling about the team, about how this has all played out, about how they might move to Los Angeles, it’s plunged this city into a malaise about football that I’ve never seen.”

And it will all spill out Sunday.

“I just think, for the most part people are hurt. It’s not even so much anger anymore,” longtime Chargers fan Chris Ritchie said. “It’s the kind of hurt in which you’re asking the Chargers and the political leaders: ‘Why are you doing this to us? Why is this happening?’

“The city can’t get it together. The team is on their way out of town. It’s a terrible situation. It’s sad, mostly.”

 by Elvis
9 years 6 months ago
 Total posts:   41516  
 Joined:  Mar 28 2015
United States of America   Los Angeles
Administrator

I heard a bit of Scott Kaplan today and he said, in the end, he think Kroenke gets Inglewood, that he'll buy it, from the NFL, from Spanos, but he'll get it because money wins. Billy Ray agreed.

Then Scott said he'd had an hour long conversation with Fabiani. He asked Fabiani, if the Chargers are so gone, why are you still talking to me? He also said the conversation was off the record but then he read Vinny's article (above) and that was pretty much their conversation...

 by OldSchool
9 years 6 months ago
 Total posts:   1750  
 Joined:  Jun 09 2015
United States of America   LA Coliseum
Pro Bowl

Interesting that Vinny doesn't broach the subject of this same happening for the Rams, who's possible home finale is prior to the Chargers game. Or the same for the Raiders. I get that currently the Chargers are the only team currently close to him but any of the three could be in his area very soon and probably should be given the same respect. Can you imagine the Raiders or even the Rams wanting him as their beat writer after his homerist attitude for Spanos?

 by max
9 years 6 months ago
 Total posts:   5714  
 Joined:  Jun 01 2015
United States of America   Sarasota, FL
Hall of Fame

Vinny writes for SoCal.

And really, when you think about it, no one outside of STL cares about the fans in STL.

STL is an afterthought to NFL fans outside of STL. It's not even Cleveland.

 by den-the-coach
9 years 6 months ago
 Total posts:   870  
 Joined:  May 22 2015
United States of America   Fifty-four Forty or Fight
Veteran

max wrote:STL is an afterthought to NFL fans outside of STL. It's not even Cleveland.


No it's not because Cleveland has great fans and endured far more than St. Louis fans. What I find amazing is the whole reason back in the 90's that St. Louis was the only expansion team building a dome is because in their research they found many fans stayed away during bad weather and the dome would guarantee them a good seat in any type of weather.

That's why I was shocked they went with an open air stadium down by the river, the weather will be challenging. I expected St. Louis commit to a retractable dome via much like Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis. IMO that would enticed ESK especially with all the extra games you could have held at that venue because of being centrally located. Football, basketball even hockey. That's why they should have partnered with Kroenke right after he bought the Rams, they knew about the clause and now they have to suffer the consequences for being reactive not proactive.

 by SoCalRam78
9 years 6 months ago
 Total posts:   1087  
 Joined:  May 25 2015
United States of America   SoCal
Pro Bowl

max wrote:Vinny writes for SoCal.

And really, when you think about it, no one outside of STL cares about the fans in STL.

STL is an afterthought to NFL fans outside of STL. It's not even Cleveland.



The Rams have been irrelevant for a decade. Yes, they've been lousy. But I guarantee you the Rams have received the least amount of press in the NFL the last 10 years. Bad team in a baseball market in fly overville.

 by Hacksaw
9 years 6 months ago
 Total posts:   24523  
 Joined:  Apr 15 2015
United States of America   AT THE BEACH
Moderator

Let's hope ESK helps the fans of SD by moving the Rams to LA

 by dieterbrock
9 years 6 months ago
 Total posts:   11512  
 Joined:  Mar 31 2015
United States of America   New Jersey
Hall of Fame

den-the-coach wrote:
That's why I was shocked they went with an open air stadium down by the river, the weather will be challenging. I expected St. Louis commit to a retractable dome via much like Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis. IMO that would enticed ESK especially with all the extra games you could have held at that venue because of being centrally located. Football, basketball even hockey. That's why they should have partnered with Kroenke right after he bought the Rams, they knew about the clause and now they have to suffer the consequences for being reactive not proactive.


They cant figure out the financing for a 1 billion dollar bargain open aired stadium. How could they figure out how to finance a 1.5+ billion retractable??

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