Brooklyn Rangers Fan
Change is good.
I'd go Nets over Islanders since the move to Brooklyn, but other than that I think you're spot on.Yankees
Mets
Giants
Knicks
Jets
Rangers
Islanders
Nets
Devils
I'd go Nets over Islanders since the move to Brooklyn, but other than that I think you're spot on.Yankees
Mets
Giants
Knicks
Jets
Rangers
Islanders
Nets
Devils
I might flip the Giants and Mets, but otherwise I think that's pretty close.Yankees
Mets
Giants
Knicks
Jets
Rangers
Islanders
Nets
Devils
I have always wondered why you guys called football soccer, while the sport you reserve the name football for would be more accurately described as handball.In NYC Hockey is a Niche sport. It is not a sport that most people watch in comparison to NBA/nfl/mlb.
Because of the Yankees and the history of baseball in this town I would say MLB is number 1 in NYC. It also helps they have a season that takes up half the year.
The NFL is clearly number 2 and would be number 1 if the Giants and Jets werent so ****ing awful. They also have a very short season compared to other sports and college football isnt as big in nyc as it is pretty much everywhere else. Despite this the NY Giants are as storied a franchise as any in the NFL.
I suspect the NBA would be as big as Baseball if the Knicks were a great team. Basketball is played the most out of any of the 4 major sports inside the city. And a lot of pro basketball players are native nyers. They are clearly third imo. When the Knicks are winning the Garden is even louder than when the Rangers are.
Next would be Hockey, out of the four major sports they would be dead last. But in spite of this Hockey is still infinitely bigger in NYC than it is in most other places in the US just from the sheer number of fans it has. I would say there are at least 1 million Ranger fans in this town without exaggerating. It is more than just a Niche sport when you compare it to other places in the US but it is a Niche sport compared to the other 3 sports within NYC.
Soccer is huge in nyc because of minority communities and hardcore soccer fans who watch international leagues but because the MLS sucks they havent achieved the foothold they want in the casual fan market. Plus the US is still decades behind the south american or european soccer powers for the sport to really gain interest even though it is probably the third most played sport at the amateur level in this entire country behind basketball and football and way above baseball.
How big would be Stanley Cup for New York?
I know NY is not a hockey hotspot, but is NHL a major sport in New York or it is more like MLS?
Thanks![]()
I still like the Yankees, but strongly believe analytics has ruined the game of baseball.I'm a Rangers fan. I use to like the Yankees and the Knicks but for both that's a long time ago. I don't really care about them now and actually I like to have summers away from sports pretty much.
I still like the Yankees, but strongly believe analytics has ruined the game of baseball.
Analytics was always a player evaluation tool, not a coaching tool, but it's being used as one anyway. Little 5'6" 150 pound middle infielders are being taught to muscle up, hit exclusively to the pull side, and launch balls in the air because they too can hit 25 home runs. No one hits-and-runs anymore. Less than 10% of batters use the opposite field effectively. Pitching repertoires have become ridiculously standardized now. How many knuckleballers and true sinkerballers are there in MLB? How many pitchers still throw a split-fingered fastball, or a screwball? Infield shifts and technology aided defensive field positioning have taken the art out of fielding styles. No one bunts, even when it makes sense to, and they usually mess up when they try because they are out of practice.
It makes modern day baseball nigh unwatchable at times. 90s/00s baseball was pretty good though. I miss it.
The hockey equivalent today would be if some genius decided "hits per 60" or "shot velocity" was some kind of predictive indicator of goals per 60, and overnight, every Johnny Gaudreau was coached to focus on their clapper and their hitting ability, even though most would be terrible at scoring and defending that way, and the game predictably degraded as a result. Then some jackass who never played dissed the backhand shot because it "scores less" and the game made a conscious decision to just eliminate it altogether while pretending it still existed.
Hockey is by far the best live sport, and the best TV sport, and it's not even close. It's just most people don't know it because they're too busy watching the 48 minute snoozefest / 3 point shooting contest that is basketball.
3am bump on this post at this time of year is crazyHello NY'ers. I stumbled upon this thread as i googled "NYR popularity in NY"
This thread is 4.5 yrs old and based on most answers, back then, they were 6th most popular in NY, and this is when the NYR were not fun to watch and not good yet. (U new yorkers are spoiled with this fun and amazing team)
Now that they're doing great and 1st overall in NHL and are so fun to watch with Panarin, Igor, Kreider, Z, Fox and Trocheck, etc.. are the NYR still 6th behind NYY, NYK, NYG, Mets and Jets, or have the NYR popularity in NY moved up a bit... maybe 4th or 5th?? Have they at least surpassed the Jets or mets??
Thanks
it's sad, cuz the NYR are such a fun team. But i get it. NY is not born into hockey like here in MTL.If you want to know how popular the Rangers are all you need to do is listen to sports radio. The #1 team in the league for most of the season is barely a footnote. Give me a break about its popularity. Maybe in absolute terms because the city is so large.
Hey they were talking Rangers the other night on 98.7 after the flyers game. Idk who the guys were but they admitted that they don’t know much about hockey but they were getting hyped about the upcoming playoffs. And they knew enough to say that the Rangers need to play better 5 on 5 lolIf you want to know how popular the Rangers are all you need to do is listen to sports radio. The #1 team in the league for most of the season is barely a footnote. Give me a break about its popularity. Maybe in absolute terms because the city is so large.
Hey they were talking Rangers the other night on 98.7 after the flyers game. Idk who the guys were but they admitted that they don’t know much about hockey but they were getting hyped about the upcoming playoffs. And they knew enough to say that the Rangers need to play better 5 on 5 lol
I agree. Just because the spring through fall is filled with 90 year olds clogging up the WFAN and ESPNNY phone lines talking about Yanks/Mets trade scenarios and complaining about missing like 10 games out of 162 because of streaming doesn’t mean the Rangers aren’t immensely popular. I personally have a lot of hockey fan friends.The masses have always shown out more for the Rangers than the media has. A cup win would be an enormous story, breaking a 13 year NY championship drought
I could never get into anything if I couldn't play it but for me a couple things happened. I had to be active. Hockey was just starting to grow in my area in my mid teens and I got into that....and learning how to skate and play started to consume a lot of my time. If you're going to get any good at it it became apparent to me real fast that I would have to put some real time into it and I loved doing it. Kind of even ate into the time I was putting into playing both baseball and football. And then I went into the Coast Guard in 1981 and then it seemed I had even less time for other sports. I was stationed the last 3 years on Governors Island and you could skate year round at Sky Rinks which later on moved from an apartment building near MSG to where it is now and today is known as Chelsea Piers. It was that operation I believe anyway. I wasn't there when the Sky Rinks thing ended. When I got out of the service in '85 I just moved back home upstate to work nights for USPS. I liked hockey best.....the rest became a distraction so eventually they all just fell away but there's also starting a family and other things I like to do besides sports.
I agree. Just because the spring through fall is filled with 90 year olds clogging up the WFAN and ESPNNY phone lines talking about Yanks/Mets trade scenarios and complaining about missing like 10 games out of 162 because of streaming doesn’t mean the Rangers aren’t immensely popular. I personally have a lot of hockey fan friends.
Another thing-I have spent a lot of time in an area that is considered a big US hockey market and it was not nearly as popular as I thought it would be. To my surprise hockey is still last of the four major sports there, so I think New York is doing just fine as a hockey city.
It helps that their team in Pit has done a lot of winning. Never forget that they were very close to losing the franchise when they didn’t have a generational player.I lived in Pittsburgh for two years and I lived in Philly for a year. In Philly it was all Eagles (they won the Super Bowl that year) I met one Flyers fan all year. In Pittsburgh I saw a ton of people wearing Pens gear and almost everyone claimed to be a Pens fan. Their busses had the a flickering "Let"s go Pens" sign. NYC is like Philly. Not even close to Pittsburgh.