Quote RL13="RL13"I never understood the argument that those names were meant to bring children into the game either. I would argue 95% of children who go to games simply want to copy whatever their dad goes, and wants to feel apart of the sociological lineage of dad going to games, like his dad, and his dad, and so on so forth. Or the other way around, children dragged to games by zealous parents. All this regardless of mascot caricatures of arbitrary chosen nicknames.
If you want to bring people into the game, surely, it's people within 20-30 bracket, and those within that bracket easily amused by a Wildcats crest possibly aren't the right demographic in the first place.'"
No offense, but I think that's complete rubbish.
If you want to bring people into the games, you don't pick such a restricting demographic. You try and appeal to as many as possible. Kids, teens, adults, pensioners, disabled, women, ethnic minorities, etc. Find something for everyone, not concentrate on one tiny demographic that probably represents a tiny proportion of the crowd anyway.
And 20-30? Most of the people I know got into the game in their early teens, and not because of their parents, because of their friends.
Team nicknames and mascots are great marketing tools for primary school children. In the schools I've worked in, it has often been the kids dragging the parents down rather than the way you've said.