A topic that we've discussed from time to time is the dynamics of booing. My experience in watching sports is that the fans, who arevirtually all white, are almost always quicker to boo a white athlete and are also much less forgiving of them over time. It's been that way since I was a kid and the Pirates fielded a team consisting of all blacks and white third baseman Richie Hebner. Hebner was a .300 hitter with a very likeablepersonality, but he was booed mercilessly while the black players never were.
There are various factors at work here, both conscious and subconscious. One of them is that whites are always more sensitive about what they're saying and doing around blacks.Most whites act differently towards blacks than they do towards whites in the same situation.
Blacks also seem to be more sensitive about being booed or "disrespected" in any way by fans. The now infamous brawl among Pacers and Pistons fans is an extreme example.
The reason I bring this up now is because I just ran across an article about why Serena Williams didn't take part in the just concluded prestigious tennis tournament in Indian Wells, California. She's not there becausewas booed there four years ago and still isn't over it.
Talk about thin-skinned! The Williams sisters are known for their arrogance, and also for almost routinely pulling out of tournaments at the last minute because of sudden "injuries." A couple of white tennis sisters who acted anywhere at all as prima donna-like as the Williams girls do would be relentlessly pilloried and mocked by the media and booed by a portion of fans on a regular basis.But poor Serena just can't get over the very occasional hard time she receives from tennis fans.
[url]http://sports.espn.go.com/sports/tennis/news/story?id=201375 3[/url]
There are various factors at work here, both conscious and subconscious. One of them is that whites are always more sensitive about what they're saying and doing around blacks.Most whites act differently towards blacks than they do towards whites in the same situation.
Blacks also seem to be more sensitive about being booed or "disrespected" in any way by fans. The now infamous brawl among Pacers and Pistons fans is an extreme example.
The reason I bring this up now is because I just ran across an article about why Serena Williams didn't take part in the just concluded prestigious tennis tournament in Indian Wells, California. She's not there becausewas booed there four years ago and still isn't over it.
Talk about thin-skinned! The Williams sisters are known for their arrogance, and also for almost routinely pulling out of tournaments at the last minute because of sudden "injuries." A couple of white tennis sisters who acted anywhere at all as prima donna-like as the Williams girls do would be relentlessly pilloried and mocked by the media and booed by a portion of fans on a regular basis.But poor Serena just can't get over the very occasional hard time she receives from tennis fans.
[url]http://sports.espn.go.com/sports/tennis/news/story?id=201375 3[/url]