Piscataway and Princeton Make List for Best Football Fans
BLOOMINGTON, INDIANA, UNITED STATES - 2021/11/13: Shirtless Indiana University fans cheer against Rutgers during an NCAA football game at Memorial Stadium. Rutgers beat IU 38-3. (Photo by Jeremy Hogan/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)
With the “Big Game” coming this Sunday, 230 countries and over a billion humans are preparing to watch the team residing in West Missouri take on the national birds from the city of brotherly love.
The money mongers at WalletHub studied more than 240 big cities in the United States to try to find the best place for football fans. They used 25 metrics, from ticket prices to fan engagement, and they say that Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania is the winner. Many fans most definitely disagree.
They claim that while Pittsburgh has their metallically named team, plenty of Pennsylvanians will be going green this weekend.
Green Bay, Wisconsin, ranked second, which isn’t a surprise since their fans like to wear wedges of cheese on their heads to show support for their favorite team. Dallas, Texas, ranked third, thanks to those fans of the cattle wranglers.
Boston, Massachusetts, ranked fourth on the list. If you’ve ever tried to find a jersey other than one that supports their revolutionaries in Beantown, you’ve probably failed. Los Angeles, California, rounded out the top five, and is home to two teams that helped their ranking. Philly placed 15th, New York came in at 6th, Princeton landed at 45th, and Piscataway made the list at 236th.
As for the worst city for football fans? The study found that the home of Orville Redenbacher, Valparaiso, Indiana, came in dead last.
25 Best Sports Anthems, Ranked
Sports Anthems: It’s amazing how they can move thousands and thousands of people all at once. Without a doubt, at least some of these songs on this list will be played at some point during MLB’s Opening Day.
Most sporting events without music nowadays just fall flat. An appropriate soundtrack is practically essential. Now, different sporting events often have different vibes. This can vary by the sport itself, the level of said sport or the region in which the sport is being played.
With this in mind, this list was crafted to have some surprises, yet also be overall universal. It’s trying to walk a very particular line of mass appeal and unexpectedness. Truth be told, this list of the best sports anthems walks that line rather brilliantly.
A general view during the 2023 Opening Day game between the Philadelphia Phillies and the Cincinnati Reds at Citizens Bank Park on April 07, 2023 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Tim Nwachukwu/Getty Images)
How This Best Sports Anthems List Was Determined
This author has been to her share of sporting events over the years. Regardless of the sport, there are just certain songs that are ubiquitous at sporting events. Whether it’s high school, minor leagues or the pros, these 25 songs deliver on at least one over more of these levels:
-Does the song help hype up a crowd?
-Does the song add a new, appropriate level of emotion to a sporting event?
-Does the song have a unique tie to a team/athlete, but can also transcend it?
-Does it have a universally recognizable hook?
-Has it been used in a sports movie, thus, increasing its reach to the general public?
Look, this list is far from scientific, but it sure is a lot of fun, which is the whole point of any list like this. Frankly, it was a lot of fun to put together. It’s even more fun to revisit when major sports events appear on the calendar, from Opening Day to the Super Bowl and everywhere in between.
From rock to hip hop to EDM to pop, here are the 25 best sports anthems, ranked.
Joel Katz is the Morning Show Personality, Assistant Program Director, Podcast Host, Voiceover artist, audio producer, and Digital Content Writer for Magic 98.3. Joel has been working in New Jersey radio since college and started at Magic in 2002 as the Morning Show Host, “I can’t think of another place where I’d fit more perfectly; it’s just a great company with awesome people.” Joel is married to Kathleen, his elementary school sweetheart (they were each other’s first dates at age 9), shares a birthday with his oldest son, Ty, and has twins, Kiera and Liam. Joel runs at least 3.1 miles every day and enjoys playing basketball, doing laundry, saving his turn signal for when he really needs it, kissing dogs through a fence, using coasters, making that cool noise by rubbing his fingers on balloons, and chasing after ping pong balls on a windy cruise ship.