[h=2]ESPN host Colin Cowherd suggested on his nationally syndicated radio  show on Tuesday that the Indiana Pacers have low attendance at their  home games because Indiana fans are racist.[/h] "You're holding an  organization to a standard that happens because of race. There's no  other explanation why people don't go to Pacers games," Cowherd 
said. "The Pacers are fantastic, have been for several years, nobody goes to the games."
 Cowherd added that  race had to be the only explanation because Pacers tickets are  "reasonably priced," the "team is outstanding," and the "locker room is  full of good guys."
 "Nobody's saying  everybody in Indianapolis is racist. Nobody is saying Indianapolis won't  support African-American athletes," Cowherd said. "What we're saying is  Indianapolis punishes the Pacers more than they punish the Colts for  indiscretions off the field or off the court, and a lot of that is  racial."
 According to RTV6 in Indianapolis, Cowherd cited postings from Pacers  fans on his Facebook page calling some of Indiana's basketball players  "thugs."
 According to ESPN, the Pacers "are averaging 14,433 people at home games in 2013, 27th out of 30 teams in the league" and, in 2012, "the Pacers were next-to-last in home attendance, with an average of 14,168 at home games."
The Pacers, in a statement on Wednesday, said, "that's one person's opinion we don't agree with."
 "We  are grateful to those who have supported us so far this season and over  the years and we expect the support to grow as the season goes on. This  is a great sports town, as evidenced by the great crowds we had during  the playoffs last season and many times this season," the team said.  "The Pacers are a very good team with a very good group of players, on  and off the court, who are very proud representatives of the city and  the state."
 
UPDATE:  Cowherd was claiming that Pacer fans are still penalizing the team for  the 2004 brawl in Detroit when former Indiana players Stephen Jackson  and Ron Artest infamously fought with Detroit fans in the stands. In  response, 
Indianapolis Star columnist Bob Kravitz 
wrote  that Cowherd, watching "afar from Bristol, Conn.," does not get that  that it takes years to rebuild a season ticket base after the Pacers  traded away their top talent in the middle of the last decade. 
Kravitz continues: 
 
This team drew great crowds when  Reggie Miller, Mark Jackson and Antonio and Dale Davis were battling the  Knicks and the Bulls. The team drew well in the early 2000s with  Jermaine O'Neal and Co., and the big crowds continued to support the  Pacers even after all hell broke loose in Auburn Hills, Mich., on Nov.  19, 2004.