Jmustang1968 wrote:I dont care too much for social interaction during the games. I actually enjoying watching the games because I love the sport and the strategy involved. Super Bowl parties bring out the "experts" who dont watch much but the Super Bowl and make ridiculous claims and statements.
These people are often the overly enthusiastic ones who cheer too loud and too often. This is also why I dont enjoy watching sports at bars and such. It becomes the lets show everyone else how much more of a fan I am by cheering and clapping the loudest. Now, being excited and cheering during certain parts of the game in critical situations like big scores and turnovers is expected And can add to the experience. I am talking about shit like 4 yard gains, converting a first down when up 3 scores, tackling the ball carrier for a short gain on 1st etc...
See...A Superbowl party is just that. A party.
If I'm watching, say a regular season hockey game, my eyes do not leave the screen and I am focused on every play with the puck. I don't like to be bothered, I want to watch the game. I want to watch the skating, the line changes, the officiating, the stick handling...every facet of the game, and I usually turn off the volume so I can play closer attention to what is happening on the ice.
But for me at least, the Super Bowl is a spectacle. Division and Conference championships are much more fun to watch in my eyes. What I expect from a Super Bowl crowd contains people who are more excited about the commercials, people who often get up and leave the game to grab food, people who can't wait to see Katy Perry, and guys who think they play for the team they root for.
Would love to watch a Super Bowl with a group who is into football, but the more people involved, the less interest in the game.
So I just coast along with them and not really care.
However, I do have a long standing tradition of playing "the Super Bowl" with a friend on the snes (Madden '94). For over seven years we get together, share honey roasted peanuts and Sam Adams, and play as the contenders (by a coin flip of course).