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If there's one thing the Kevin Kolb/John Skelton QB controversy has taught us, it's that Arizona Cardinals fans are a fickle bunch.

And, as someone who grew up a Cardinals fan and suffered the annual abuse that came with the jerseys and hats, it's much better to be "fickle" than "non-existent".

When news came out about how some at the Cardinals Fan Fest last week booed Kevin Kolb after some errant passes, opinions were mixed. Some bashed the fans for piling on a QB in a practice. Others said Kolb deserved every bit of animosity, because the high-priced Kolb has been a high- priced disappointment thus far.

Lost in all of it was the fact that by voicing their displeasure, right or wrong, the fans showed they cared. It's a relatively new development for the Arizona Cardinals, and it's one that should be celebrated, not criticized.

Of course, no Cardinals fan wants to boo anyone wearing red. Ask even the most ardent anti-Kolb fan and they'll tell you they'd rather the QB succeed and prove them wrong than flounder and prove them right. But that desire should not - and does not - prevent them from voicing their displeasure should they receive poor play from the most important position in sports.

Which, unfortunately, Cardinals fans have received far too often.


Whether it was Tom Tupa, Stan Gelbaugh, Dave Krieg in the early 90s or Jeff Blake, Josh McCown, Matt Leinart, Derek Anderson or Max Hall more recently, the Cardinals have had their fair share of lousy QBs. All of them deserved to get booed at one point or another - and some probably did. But it certainly didn't resonate, because no one really gave the Valley's NFL team much thought.

Ironically enough, as AZCardinals.com's Darren Urban pointed out on Burns and Gambo last week, even Kurt Warner suffered the wrath of Cardinals fans after a late-game fumble cost the team a shot at beating the Rams.

Warner deserved the boos then and, one could argue, Kolb deserved them Wednesday. But, as Warner can attest, boos do not mean your career is over; it just means fans want to see something change.

Something did for Warner, as he elevated his play and led the Cardinals to two-and-a-half seasons of unprecedented success.

Kolb will have that chance, too, regardless of what happened at Fan Fest. But that's for another day.

Now should be all about recognizing that the Cardinals not only have fans, but passionate ones, too. Mediocrity is unacceptable, and poor play will not be tolerated.

It all comes back to the idea that anger is better than apathy when it comes to what a team wants from fans, because at least the former means they're paying attention.

And that, in itself, is a welcome change from the past.

11 Comments   |   Join the conversation »
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  • Abuse
    bugsby wrote...
    Silly article
    Obviously bias, as well. Booing your starting QB (or backup for that matter) at a free family expo isn't showing passion for your team. It's being obnoxoius. Can you imagine someone booing a basketball player for missing a shot in practice? Lazy Journalism
  • Abuse
    theAdamGreen wrote...
    @bugsby
    I could certainly see a basketball player getting booed at a practice for missing shots if the previous season saw him arrive with great fanfare and expectations only to fall short. But I'd rather have fans that boo (sometimes when they shouldn't) than fans who don't care. Free expo or not, they are there because they care and booed for the very same reason.
  • Abuse
    LiveForSports wrote...
    Fan Expectations
    That 2-3 year run as "Superbowl Contenders" coupled with the new stadium and a lot of young talent particularly on D has raised the fan expectation bar big time. Last step is to re-solidify the QB situation in this post Warner transition phase.
  • Abuse
    bugsby wrote...
    @Adam
    Yeah, that mentality really works well for Eagles fans. They are working on 50+ years and no SB wins. It's dumb. And making excuses for them is even dumber. Fan Fest was a circus, not even a real practice. No place for booing. Explain to me how you think that helps our situation. That's right. It doesn't.
  • Abuse
    Teddy P wrote...
    Who cares?
    You could barely hear the boos at the stadium. Yet KTAR and this website have absolutely beaten this story to death. This is a non-story! Every other valley sports publication/outlet stopped talking about this a long time ago. Please find something else to pollute your website and radio waves with. Tell us about the Suns offseason moves and draft, The D-Backs slow improvement, The Goldwater institute, how new Cards players look in camp, University of Northern Mexico baseball in Omaha. Please stop writing about a couple dozen idiot fans at a free event letting out some barely audible boos.
  • Abuse
    Tennisgrandpa wrote...
    Booing
    I don't believe in booing your own players, sorry I just don't. Players need to know that the fans are with them and booing tells them that they're not. We've got enough fair-weathered fans in AZ without providing excuses for them to take the next step from booing to "same old Cardinals" or "it's the Bidwills fault". You wanna do an article on booing then talk about Justin Upton. Now there are some boos.
    Dale
  • Abuse
    sundevil7901 wrote...
    Blown WAY out of proportion
    A smattering of an boos because Kolb missed a couple passes in a prcatice, that's all this was.You cheer for caught passes, boo for missed ones. People are reading itno this way too much. There wasn't exactly a lot to see or get excited for at a practice.Is there anyone in the local media who isn't willing to read too much into this?
  • Abuse
    sundevil7901 wrote...
    I feel bad
    for the people who weren't in attendance, being falsely led to believe that Kolb set foot on the field and boos rained down. Many media and fans in attendance didn't even hear the boos.
  • Abuse
    sundevil7901 wrote...
    That said
    the larger theme of Green's article isn't lost on me. Passion, positive or negative, means that fans care.
  • Abuse
    FitzIsMyHero wrote...
    @bugsby
    This is gna be a long one...
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