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K-town
10-05-2006, 06:05 PM
Might be OT/Romper Room.
A little humor from our friends at the Onion.

Hungry Bears Defense Feeds On Soldier Field Crowd
October 5, 2006 | Issue 42•40

CHICAGO—The league-leading Chicago Bears defense, which overpowered and dominated the Seattle Seahawks last Sunday en route to a 37-6 victory, took time after the game to emphasize that they would not have had the extra energy needed to hold the Seattle offense to a mere two field goals if it weren't for the mass cannibalization of nearly 60,000 of their hometown fans.


"Without a doubt, these are the best fans in the world," said Bears linebacker Brian Urlacher, who said that without the rush he received from the supportive, nutrient-rich Bears fans he devoured during the game, he would not have had the strength to make seven tackles during the game, five of which were unassisted.

"They gave us what we needed to play hard all four quarters, and this win is definitely for them," continued Urlacher, pointing to a section of empty, blood-stained seats that still housed the uneaten portions of dozens of loyal fans.

"Mmmm," Urlacher added.

"When I hear that crowd screaming, it just makes me hungrier and hungrier," said Bears nickelback Ricky Manning Jr., who had four tackles against the Seahawks, and credits the 19 beta-keratin-rich fans he ate for his ability to see Matt Hasslebeck's eyes, aiding him in making two key interceptions. "Many people say that your crowd doesn't make a difference, but in well-fed, nutrient-rich Chicago, that certainly isn't the case."

"They're simply the best," Manning added, licking his blood-encrusted teeth, the remnants of a gnarled human index finger still wedged in the gap of his two incisors.

Bears fans are renowned as some of the largest, most well-rounded, vitamin-laden fans throughout the National Football League. Although the NFL does not keep statistics on the nutrition content of its crowds, conventional wisdom holds that the amount of protein in the Soldier Field crowd, thought to be double the league average, has allowed Bears defenses throughout history to quickly build and repair stressed muscle tissue during grueling 16-game seasons.

"There is no question that they keep us going down the stretch," said 300-pound defensive tackle Tank Johnson, who says he gets a rush of energy from the women and children in attendance when he chews open their stomachs to consume any leftover carbohydrates stored in their digestive systems and the belly fat of their abdominal cavities before gulping down their cheeks and the flesh around their eye sockets, which he says gives him the necessary supplement of the L-cysteine amino acid. "The sacrifice these fans make, especially the ones who travel to the away games… It just hits you right in the gut."

""I've heard from guys who play in Miami, Tampa Bay, and Minnesota, and they all complain that their fans just aren't as good as ours," added Johnson with a slight belch brought on by the high fat content of a fan who used to sit right behind the goalpost.

302-pound defensive lineman Ian Scott agreed with his teammates, saying that there is just something different about the heart of a Bears fan that is different from that of any other in the league.

"It isn't just their heart—it's their nutrient-rich kidneys and livers, too, that make them such an integral part of the game," said Scott, who along with safety Mike Brown, linebacker Lance Briggs, and cornerback Charles Tillman, tends to enjoy the fleshy calf and thigh muscles first while coating their exposed skin with the excess fat adhering to fans' bones in order to keep themselves warm during brutal Chicago winters. "I don't know how many times opposing quarterbacks have been unnerved by our unique relationship with the good, tender, juicy people of Chicago, and have thrown an interception or fumbled a snap because of it."

"I can't imagine eating any other fans, and I hope I never have to," Scott added.

With the Bears jumping quickly out of the gate with a 4-0 record, many in Chicago are talking Super Bowl, and though head coach Lovie Smith said he plans to take it one game at a time, he knows the benefit of having a home-crowd presence on the world's grandest stage.

"Hopefully we can pack the stadium in Miami with Bears fans," Smith said. "It'd be great to have their unique Soldier Field flavor with us to help get us through the big one without a hiccup."

© Copyright 2006, Onion, Inc. All rights reserved.
The Onion is not intended for readers under 18 years of age.

packers11
10-05-2006, 06:11 PM
Yea I saw all of those Bear fans fill up that stadium when Favre was stomping on them till 2 years ago....

The only ones that were eatting at that stadium was Favre ... He was eatting up the defense....

But hey... Im not a Bear basher, im a bandwagon Basher.... I saw it to often here living in New England...

green_bowl_packer
10-05-2006, 06:25 PM
I live down here amongst them, and this year it's especially painful. Here are fan loyalty rankings based on the teams records, attendance, Deceember tempreture, etc (this may have already been posted here already, I apologize if so), but the Bears are not even in the top half of the league based on there criteria.

http://www.bizjournals.com/specials/pages/34.html

ahaha
10-05-2006, 06:34 PM
Raider fans are worse than Cardinal fans? That just doesn't make sense to me.

mraynrand
10-05-2006, 10:43 PM
Well, you're going to see a lot of fans disguised as empty seats at Packer games if the current trend continues - especially after Favre hangs 'em up.

Actually, I thought this thread was about TV dinners.

MJZiggy
10-06-2006, 07:23 AM
That would be something I've never seen before...are you just hoping to move up on the season ticket list?

Brainerd
10-06-2006, 10:58 AM
The league-leading Chicago Bears defense
According to NFL.com they are 4th. San Diego's D is 1st. And if you want to throw out San Diego because they have only played 3 games then Baltimore would be 1st. The whole league-leading nonsense at this point is foolish. Out of the top 5 leaders in defense at this point in the season only KC has played against good competition. The article was propaganda to get Chicagoans to jump back on a bandwagon.

mraynrand
10-06-2006, 11:13 AM
That would be something I've never seen before...are you just hoping to move up on the season ticket list?

The two aren't the same. People kept their season tickets in the 80s, but there were some games with 10,000 no-shows.

K-town
10-06-2006, 04:09 PM
The league-leading Chicago Bears defense
According to NFL.com they are 4th. San Diego's D is 1st. And if you want to throw out San Diego because they have only played 3 games then Baltimore would be 1st. The whole league-leading nonsense at this point is foolish. Out of the top 5 leaders in defense at this point in the season only KC has played against good competition. The article was propaganda to get Chicagoans to jump back on a bandwagon.

Actually, the article was supposed to be a joke about how the Bears were a bunch of cannibals chowing down on their plump, juicy fans. :shock:

Or were you referring to the fan loyalty rankings from bizjournal?

Brainerd
10-06-2006, 11:02 PM
The league-leading Chicago Bears defense
According to NFL.com they are 4th. San Diego's D is 1st. And if you want to throw out San Diego because they have only played 3 games then Baltimore would be 1st. The whole league-leading nonsense at this point is foolish. Out of the top 5 leaders in defense at this point in the season only KC has played against good competition. The article was propaganda to get Chicagoans to jump back on a bandwagon.

Actually, the article was supposed to be a joke about how the Bears were a bunch of cannibals chowing down on their plump, juicy fans. :shock:

Or were you referring to the fan loyalty rankings from bizjournal?

No. I'm a boob that didn't read past the 1st paragraph. Not a fan of bear's articles.