Are you jealous? After all, your man has had a date every Sunday
-- but not with you. Instead, he's cozying up to the likes of burly football players -- from Donovan McNabb to Peyton Manning. You might win your man back after the Super Bowl, but next year won't be any different.
Just what is it about men running around with a funny-looking ball that
puts your guy in a trance? Brady Smith, defensive end for the Atlanta
Falcons, offers insight into what makes your guy go as gaga for the
game as you do for a shoe sale. Read on, because understanding your
man's passion for pigskin might translate into more passion for you.
Guys want to win. Little boys race each other to the
next tree when they're kids, and that competitive nature never ceases.
"The mindset: Go out [on the field] and feel like you'll never be
denied," says Smith. Your guy isn't much different; he feels like the
twelfth guy on the field when he's rooting for his team. He sports the
team jersey and lives vicariously
-- from the bleachers, a sports bar or his own couch --
through the Smiths of the world. The most loyal of fans feel euphoric
when their boys win and heartbroken when they lose. Be there for your
guy through the good ("we're going to the playoffs") and the bad
("we're in last place, and our coach just got fired").
He wants to tackle his problems.
Men love seeing big strong guys bashing heads and slamming each other
to the ground. True, it speaks to their animal instincts. But seeing a
battered football player pick himself up and charge for a touchdown is
also inspiring. "You can just go someplace in your mind...you find that
zone so you can worry about that 325-pound guy in front of you,"
explains Smith. Observing that sort of determination gives your guy
hope that he can do the same when things aren't going right for him at
the office, with his pals, with you. Think of it this way: He uses
football the way you do self-help books
or Oprah. So feel free to encourage his devotion to sports, his form of therapy.
He secretly longs to be a coach.
The coaches come up with plays, and the players follow their directions
on where to run, where to turn, when to throw the ball, etc. Great
coaches -- from Mike Ditka to Bill Parcells --
are part motivational speaker, part father figure, part dictator, all
man. Your guy plays coach with his buddies while watching the game.
He's anticipating the next play, second-guessing whatever goes wrong
("He should have passed to so and so"), encouraging his favorite
players ("C'mon, Smith, you can do it!"). In fact, Smith says that
he'll be standing in line at the bank and all the fans want to know is,
"Why'd you guys run that play on third and three?" You can support your
guy's pipe dream by asking questions about the rules (when the
commercials are on, of course). Smith says his girlfriend asks him
about the game all the time. "It feels good to be able to explain
something you know to somebody else," he adds.
He wants action.
Football is fast and intense. Each player has a specific role and is
essential to winning. "It's the ultimate team sport," says Smith.
Football fans know the preparation and complexity of every play (just
like we know the exact layout of Bloomingdale's). For fear of missing a pass, or worse a touchdown, your guy can't take his eyes off the screen --
even if you're standing there naked calling out his name. Smith says he
gets a shiver down his spine when he sacks a quarterback. Your man can
feel the chill from where he's sitting. The lesson: You may as well
keep your clothes on during the game.
Football forges friendships.
Two strangers from opposite ends of the country with different
political affiliations and lifestyles will bond if they root for the
same team. As fans of a particular team, they share a history, and it
gives them something to talk about and analyze -- for
hours. Watching a game together gives your guy and his pals the
opportunity to cheer and shout at professional athletes who are faster,
more muscular, richer and luckier than they are. You might feel a
little left out, but you can always make sure that your guy feels luckier than everyone when he comes home to you -- after the game. Wink!
Leave a comment