@Watson_SLdn@hookinemgood The city of Clemson is home to roughly 17k people and is in the heart of the community.
I guess my argument is that football in the US isn’t just all just a corporate money grab like the NFL is. We have small community teams that we love and support too
@Watson_SLdn@hookinemgood I love football. I love English football. I’m trying to draw similarities between the cultures. The support around schools like Clemson, West Virginia, Nebraska, the Iowas, are more similar to working class British clubs than they are to corporate NFL franchises
@Chelsearory Stop using NFL games to prove a point. Go see Ohio State vs. Michigan at the Big House. Go watch Duke and UNC play at Cameron Indoor. Go watch Texas and Oklahoma at the Cotton Bowl.
We are telling you what the best of American sport is…. Go witness it
@TheMadeMember@FCBanter_@Chelsearory No but college football also has deep history and soul along with the size. I think most Americans will agree with the criticisms of NFL stadiums but college football is completely different
@Watson_SLdn@hookinemgood We keep trying to tell you that college football is EXACTLY the same! Most of us agree that the NFL is a corporate league that feels sterile. College football is the opposite and the closest thing we have to the small local clubs that Europe has.
@e_f_bartlam@Watson_SLdn They will never understand this. The reasons I love college football are the same reasons I fell in love with European football.
@OfficialC98 You can criticize NFL stadiums all day long for not having soul and you’d have a decent argument. But, insinuating that college football stadiums have no soul is idiotic
@mikeburgess99 This is probably sarcasm….. but If you’re this mesmerized by a D tier NFL stadium I can’t imagine your reaction to an average college football stadium.