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America's Most Miserable Sports Cities

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  • America's Most Miserable Sports Cities

    The city of Seattle hasn’t had it easy, sports wise. Its former NBA club, the Sonics, left town in 2008. This past year, efforts to get pro basketball back to the city by luring the Sacramento Kings fell short. The NFL Seahawks made a gallant playoff run behind young quarterback Russell Wilson, only to suffer a gut-wrenching 30-28 loss to Atlanta one round shy of the conference championship. The loss marked the Seahawks’ twelfth trip to the NFL postseason in their 37-year history, none of which have ended with a title.

    Altogether, Seattle teams have competed in 115 cumulative seasons, advancing to at least the semifinal round of the playoffs 11 times, with just a single ring by the 1979 Sonics to show for their efforts. It earns Seattle the top spot our Most Miserable Sports Cities list, just a hair ahead of Atlanta, a town whose history is loaded with Braves’ postseason flops and which lost its NHL franchise not once, but twice.

    Other towns ranking high: Phoenix, where the NBA Suns have made it to nine western conference finals and two NBA Finals without a ring, and Buffalo, where the Bills are famously 0-4 in Super Bowls and the Sabres are still looking for their first Stanley Cup despite 29 trips to the playoffs since 1973.

    If you’ve seen this list in recent years, you know that misery as defined by sheer futility – losing records, long championship droughts – isn’t what we’re going for. Everyone knows that the Chicago Cubs haven’t won a World Series in over 100 years. This is about misery in the heartbreak sense – cities whose teams have been good enough over the years to win games and make championship runs, only to disappoint in the end more often than not. So we dole out the largest numbers of misery points for the poorest records in championship round play – the Super Bowl, World Series, NBA Finals and NHL Finals. Right behind come records in semifinal round play, i.e. conference finals and league championship series, and so on back down the line. The closer you come and miss, the more misery points you score.

    But a long championship drought shouldn’t be ignored altogether, so we do add points based on the number of years since a city’s last title, and for the overall ratio of a city’s cumulative sports seasons to the number of championships it’s won (some cities have longer sports histories or more teams than others, so , for example, Cleveland’s seven titles in 227 cumulative sports seasons rates very close to Houston’s four titles in 141 seasons). And we toss in a bonus point for a city that loses a major sport through relocations – Atlanta losing the NHL and Seattle the NBA, for example.

    We limit the candidates to cities with at least 75 years of cumulative NFL, MLB, NBA and NHL seasons on its resume (MLS and WBNA don’t count — we’re sticking with the major sports leagues), the better to avoid the apples-to-oranges comparisons that come from including one-team towns like Portland and San Antonio or relatively new pro sports towns like Nashville and Charlotte.

    Pre-merger track records from the ABA and AFL, partial forerunners of the modern NBA and NFL, do count. Hence, a team like the Denver Nuggets gets hit with misery points for losing the last ABA final to the New York Nets back in 1976. Same for the Kansas City Chiefs’ Super Bowl I loss to Green Bay in 1967, when they were still part of the AFL.

    If it keeps plugging, Seattle may yet get its NBA team. The town has also been an oft-mentioned landing spot for struggling NHL franchises. And maybe Wilson and coach Pete Carrol will take the Seahawks over the hump this year. Until then, easy on the coffee. It’s known to trigger heartburn.

    No. 1 Seattle

    Teams (past and present): Seahawks, Mariners, Pilots, Sonics
    Championship Round Record: 1-3
    Semi-Final Round Record: 4-7
    Total Seasons/Championships: 115/1
    Last Title: 1979
    Let us count the ways to misery: the Sonics are now one of the NBA’s elite teams – in Oklahoma City. A push to get basketball back via Sacramento didn’t make it. The 116-win Mariners of 2001 couldn’t finish the job. And a controversial call in the 2005 Super Bowl helped ensure a Seahawks loss to Pittsburgh.

    No. 2 Atlanta

    Teams: Falcons, Braves, Hawks, Flames, Thrashers
    Championship Round Record: 1-5
    Semi-Final Round Record: 6-10
    Total Seasons/Championships: 159/1
    Last Title: 1995
    Oh, those Braves. Always near the top of the standings, but only hoisting the World Series trophy once at the end during a run of 14 straight division titles from 1991 to 2005. Meantime, the city’s two NHL franchises now play where people care about hockey, in Calgary and Winnipeg.

    No. 3 Phoenix

    Teams: Cardinals, Suns, Diamondbacks, Coyotes
    Championship Round Record: 1-3
    Semi-Final Round Record: 4-9
    Total Seasons/Championships: 101/1
    Last Title: 2001
    The Suns have reached the NBA western conference finals nine times without a championship.

    No. 4 Buffalo

    Teams: Bills, Sabres, Braves
    Championship Round Record: 2-6
    Semi-Final Round Record: 6-6
    Total Seasons/Championships: 103/2
    Last Title: 1965
    We all know the Bills are 0-4 in Super Bowls. But don’t forget the Sabres, who have competed in 29 Stanley Cup playoffs, including six semifinals, without a Cup.

    No. 5 San Diego

    Teams: Chargers, Padres, Rockets, Clippers
    Championship Round Record: 1-6
    Semi-Final Round Record: 3-3
    Total Seasons/Championships: 107/1
    Last Title: 1963
    Chargers lost their only Super Bowl (1995), the Padres their only two World Series (1984 and 1998). Meantime, two professional basketball franchises have come and gone.

    No. 6 Cleveland

    Teams: Browns I, Browns II, Rams, Indians, Cavaliers, Barons
    Championship Round Record: 6-9
    Semi-Final Round Record: 4-11
    Total Seasons/Championships: 227/6
    Last Title: 1964
    A strong run by the Browns during the 1950s and early ‘60s prevents Cleveland from being higher.

    No. 7 Kansas City

    Teams: Chiefs, Royals, Athletics, Kings, Scouts
    Championship Round Record: 3-2
    Semi-Final Round Record: 4-6
    Total Seasons/Championships: 122/3
    Last Title: 1985
    Clubs from the NBA, NHL and Major League Baseball have all left town over the years. Only MLB returned.

    No. 8 Houston

    Teams: Texans, Oilers, Astros, Rockets
    Championship Round Record: 4-4
    Semi-Final Round Record: 5-8
    Total Seasons/Championships:
    Last Title: 1995
    Lots of playoff losses over the years for the Astros and Rockets. The city did take two NBA titles when Michael Jordan was off playing baseball in 1994 and 1995, interrupting the Bulls’ dynasty.

    No. 9 Washington, DC

    Teams: Redskins, Senators l, Senators II, Nationals, Wizards, Capitals
    Championship Round Record: 7-11
    Semi-Final Round Record: 10-2
    Total Seasons/Championships: 239/7
    Last Title: 1992
    Some nice history from the Redskins. Otherwise, a slew of postseason ousters with only two other titles in 1924 and 1978.

    No. 10 Denver

    Teams: Broncos, Rockies (MLB), Nuggets, Rockies (NHL), Avalanche
    Championship Round Record: 4-6
    Semi-Final Round Record: 10-11
    Total Seasons/Championships: 142/4
    Last Title: 2001
    Great run from 1996 to 2001 yielded all four titles. But the Broncos lost four Super Bowls between 1978 and 1990, while the Nuggets have totaled 33 ABA and NBA postseason appearances without a title.

  • #2
    The top 2 Cities have a chance to move down this list if their football or baseball teams do anything!

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    • #3
      Originally posted by wayne1218 View Post
      The top 2 Cities have a chance to move down this list if their football or baseball teams do anything!
      You ain't kidding Me and a buddy were talking at the bar yesterday and this is the first time in our lives we really have a legitimate shot at a world series and a Super Bowl. 1995 was the only title in this town and damn that seems like a LONG time ago

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      • #4
        Originally posted by wayne1218 View Post
        The top 2 Cities have a chance to move down this list if their football or baseball teams do anything!
        GA TECH is in Atlanta and we have won the ACC Championship in 1990,1998,and 2009. Also winning the National Championship in 1990 so GA TECH puts Atlanta on the map
        MLB 2012***100-98 +$215 OR +2.15 UNITS
        HUGE PLAYS 2-1

        NFL 2011-2012** 6-10
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        NCAA FBL 2011-2012**** 26-23

        4-1 TOP PLAYS


        GOY 33-12 ALL SPORTS

        AS of 6/3/12

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        • #5
          Originally posted by tech fan View Post
          GA TECH is in Atlanta and we have won the ACC Championship in 1990,1998,and 2009. Also winning the National Championship in 1990 so GA TECH puts Atlanta on the map
          It is based on professional teams, not minor leagues or college.

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          • #6
            Originally posted by tech fan View Post
            GA TECH is in Atlanta and we have won the ACC Championship in 1990,1998,and 2009. Also winning the National Championship in 1990 so GA TECH puts Atlanta on the map
            about Ga Tech

            3 fans maybe?

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            • #7
              "A strong run by the Browns during the 1950s and early ‘60s prevents Cleveland from being higher."

              I'm a Cleveland fan and was surprised to see them that low. The above sentence doesn't apply to me. That was 50+ years ago and before my time.

              I've seen the drive, the fumble, Jordan over Ehlo, Years of the Indians being in the basement, Losing the WS in 95 and 97, The Browns moving, The Browns being absolute garbage since returning, Cavs getting swept in Finals, Lebron leaving Cleveland, etc.

              Also, we don't have a team close to making a run at a title. The Indians have been better this year under Tito but will miss the playoffs, and the Browns and Cavs have some nice young players but are no where near contenders.

              I'll end my rant and go back into my hole now.

              Spam
              "He beat me... Straight up... Pay him... Pay that man his money."

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              • #8
                The other 3 teams save Detroit from being on there..The LIONS are one of the oldest Teams in the Nfl and althopugh they have won championships in the 50"s ..they are one of the few teams that have never been to a superbowl..to be around that long and not even make it to the Bowl is sad..They have some of the longest suffering fans..however the Pistons, Red wings and Tigers Make the city a great sports town..

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