This article really struck a chord with me. Read it and see what you think.
https://www.theguardian.com/football/article/2024/jul/03/it-is-getting-harder-for-footballers-to-survive-the-social-media-abusers
I was on my facebook a couple of days ago, and there was a few seconds footage of Rocky training in the sunshine. I dont know why i looked at the comments, i knew what would be there, which i think says it all. Of the 8 comments 6 were negative and extremely brutal, along the lines of ‘dont know why hes still at hibs’ and ‘ill drive him to anywhere’, you know, hilarious stuff. And they seem to be self identifying as Hibs ‘fans’, if you want to call it that. From what i can see, the post was taken down shortly after, and other posts appeared featuring other players.
Leaving aside the Rocky case specifically, (ive already made thecase that i think his performances have been broadly good with the occasional high profile mistake in key moments, and hes a worthy squad player. Others may disagree, thats fine). But how have we found ourselves in this culture? Whats these peoples motivation ? I get why psychology tells us we respond more urgently to negative stimulus, so negativity gets magnified online by analytics and clicks, but what makes the ‘fans’ do it? Do they want the attention? Are they aware it damages the team? Or is it just bullies, ****, rising to the surface? It’s massively depressing.
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Thread: Players and social media
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03-07-2024 05:13 PM #1
Players and social media
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03-07-2024 05:26 PM #2This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
https://x.com/HibernianFC/status/1807829268950397245?t=oY_PJsPpxK_6IuEcAriphg&s=19
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03-07-2024 05:32 PM #3This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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03-07-2024 05:40 PM #4
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I don't get why anyone would go out their way to abuse Rocky. He works hard and has improved massively since we got him. Fine to have an opinion on needing better when we are discussing the merits of the squad but on a post that is essentially a welcome back post why would anyone say anything other than good luck. I have a mate who I see relentlessly challenging these negative posts and perhaps we all need to start doing the same when we spot them.
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03-07-2024 05:57 PM #5
My wee six-year-old nicked my phone and replied 'Good luck Elie' - just a nice message, not linked with any rumoured departure - to the Hibs Twitter post at FT today. Was going to delete it as tied to my account it seemed like the work of a simpleton adult, but genuinely seemed so wholesome and pure compared to the usual abuse that it was worth keeping.
A season of positivity AND reasons to be positive would make a hell of a difference to the whole experience of being a Hibs fan.
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03-07-2024 06:01 PM #6
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I’m all for sensible discussion about the ability of folk like Jair and Rocky ext but don’t get where the hatred certain fans find come from. This applies online and at games.
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03-07-2024 06:12 PM #7This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Football is pretty harsh and tough and I believe you need a thick skin to be involved in it. Performances are public, criticism can happen in real time and it’s not for the faint hearted. I’m not going to be a hypocrite - I get torn into conversations on here as much as the next person and my opinions aren’t always positive. Even a justified piece of constructive criticism may be hard to read if you care about your performances, as most players surely will.
But the abuse and stuff that gets doled out on Twitter, Facebook and the like? The pointless abuse in response to constructive posts? I just don’t get it and never will. To me they’re just a symptom of the modern era, where it’s easy to dole out abuse without consequence or repercussion from a place of safety. As I said - says more about the poster than the player.
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03-07-2024 06:14 PM #8
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03-07-2024 06:14 PM #9This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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03-07-2024 06:21 PM #10
Absolute nuts crazy !
Never ever joined in back in the day when Torto and Benny were getting abuse you could see they were both trying their level best for the club but both reacted to the abuse differently it was water off his back to Benny but Torto dissolved into a sweating shaking nervous wreck before your very eyes thing was Manager’s kept picking them
Rocky as others have said works hard has improved season on season and gives 100 % for the cause never bottling a tackle he and his colleagues do not deserve to be treated like this
Would not be surprised if Elie cannae wait to leave after all the online abuse he has received recently from supposed Hibs supporters
We will miss them when they are gone
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03-07-2024 06:32 PM #11
Bots mimicking people or people mimicking bots.
Ether way the platforms are guilty of monetising and encouraging divisive comments.
Not helped by the examples set by folks in the highest office either. Everything has come a bit debased.
With the growth dumb phones perhaps the smarter folks are tuning out? So maybe there’s hope.
The patterns are so formulaic it’s so predicable. And it crosses over into “normal life”
Hopefully there will be a tipping point and the pendulum will swing back."We know the people who have invested so far are simple fans." Vladimir Romanov - Scotsman 10th December 2012
"Romanov was like a breath of fresh air - laced with cyanide." Me.
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03-07-2024 07:08 PM #12This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
I’m hoping this is a season where positivity is all the rage.
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03-07-2024 07:26 PM #13
Hibs should just not allow comment on any social media posts, sad that it has come to that but too many aholes on social media, hence why came off X(twitter).
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03-07-2024 07:34 PM #14This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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03-07-2024 07:34 PM #15This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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03-07-2024 08:08 PM #16
Social media has given everyone a reach and some people believe the world wants to hear every thought that enters their head. The smartphone has made it worse because reaction time between a thought entering the head and then being broadcast to the world is seconds.
Abuse of players isn't a new thing. Joe Tortolano's interview a while back when he spoke about being a nervous wreck because he was booed when the team was read out and abused constantly when warming up suggests it goes back at least 35-40 years. The 'aye you did it on a Saturday but then switched off' doesn't wash either. Booing a player before the game suggests people had been stewing on it and building to it all week.
It brings us back to reach. In 1990 a guy ranting away would have been heard by a few people at a game or in the pub, the really insistent might have written to one of the sports letters pages but it was a pretty niche market. Fast forward to today and thousands of people see such inane 'banter'. People react to it, others interfere and before you know it there is a huge storm. The days of someone saying 'shut the **** up, you are doing my nut in' because one guy is droning on and on are gone.
I often think draining negativity is best ignored. I'm not talking about people who have a negative view of a situation but attempt to articulate why they feel that way. I mean the dump and run 'Rockys pish ha ha ha' type. That is something that thrives on the oxygen of 'publicity', it spread because of people reacting to it and that in turn means it becomes repeated behaviour. If no one reacted the perpetrators would soon get bored. I understand why that is unlikely to happen though.
I suppose it's just one of those things that has long been part of football and with increased reach comes increased prominence. It's a small minority but a determined one. There is a very obvious solution but it's so unlikely to happen that it can't be described as an easy one.
I'll tag on that I don't really agree with the quote at the start of the article linked and tbf I don't think the author of said article does either. Social media isn't inherently bad. It has given idiots a voice certainly but it has also given ordinary people with something worth listening to a change to have their words read or heard by a worldwide audience. That should never be the preserve of people with the right education or the right title. It has given people with niche interests a chance to connect and indulge their passions. Young people can hear people who talk like them discussing relevant topics, voices which are still all too often shut out of the mainstream media. The issue with social media isn't the products themselves but rather irresponsible management and irresponsible use.Last edited by Pretty Boy; 03-07-2024 at 08:17 PM.
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03-07-2024 08:43 PM #17
Given that those of the age of professional footballers now, they are maybe better drilled than the rest of us as to how to manage social media given that they have effectively grown up with it.
Of course there are big problems with online trolling and cyber bullying with the younger generation, but a few abusive posts from “football fans” may be more water off a ducks back to them than they may be to those of us a bit older?
I used to get quite annoyed reading some utter drivel on the Hibs FB pages and groups, before it got to the point I’d just skim by them kind of immune to the bile. Ultimately it got to the point where I asked myself why I was wasting my time reading such nonsense, so it was a simple solution to leave them all.
Constructive criticism is perfectly acceptable, but personal abuse on social media platforms is real scraping the barrel behaviour.
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04-07-2024 01:27 AM #18
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04-07-2024 01:58 AM #19
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It's pretty sad and I can't really understand folk going out of their way to do this but having said that, I've heard much worse things shouted directly at Hibs players by our own fans well before social media was ever a thing.
Much like being in a football crowd, being a online grants a sense of anomominity and lack of consequence, which unfortunately leads to stupid behaviour.
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04-07-2024 03:15 AM #20
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I find Rocky a bit hmmm meh. The abuse our players receive is shocking though. The average Hibs fans is becoming less and less sensible.
The hate on Campbell, equally I’m baffled by.
Back on Rocky, do we now have better CBs yes, but he’s a more than capable squad player. Something I think should have summarised when we signed him. He’s a project with potential. Unfortunately he’s not of the standard we require in the first 11.
There plenty more to blame before RockyLast edited by TheGog; 04-07-2024 at 03:17 AM.
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04-07-2024 09:31 AM #21This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
With Youan - he’s someone who puts quite a lot of stuff out there on social media and who has a track record of occasionally biting - so whilst I’m not condoning it, I could understand why some people might target him.
When all is said and done, Rocky is a decent enough centre half. With experience he might lose a few rough edges and mature into a very good player or he might not. To the best of my knowledge he’s never sought out controversy so just what he’s done to deserve “treatment” beats me. Same goes for Josh Campbell, a Hibs fan who knocks his pan in and scored a decent number of goals, absolutely bizarre that they get the comments they do online.
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04-07-2024 09:54 AM #22
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This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show QuoteLast edited by Trinity Hibee; 04-07-2024 at 09:56 AM.
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04-07-2024 10:06 AM #23This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
As do all clubs, it doesn't excuse it, but that is a fact of life.
The keyboard warriors (invisible "hardmen") are everywhere sadly.
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04-07-2024 10:10 AM #24
The answer is simple, stop allowing comments.
Not sure why the club haven't done this already, it's pretty obvious that our social media is poisonous.
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04-07-2024 04:29 PM #25This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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05-07-2024 04:59 PM #26This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Umberto Eco made a provocative statement about social media when receiving an honorary degree in Turin in 2015: it “gives legions of idiots
Very unprofessional of a person seeking sympathy to resort to arrogant name calling.
He does not seem to be against abuse as such, just does not like being abused.
"Do unto others".
Far better than to lead by example, rather than by flaming and escalating.Last edited by Edina Street; 05-07-2024 at 05:02 PM.
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05-07-2024 06:53 PM #27This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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05-07-2024 08:30 PM #28
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05-07-2024 09:08 PM #29
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Joe Newell gets it absolutely stinking from some fans. He’s most definitely Caucasian.
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05-07-2024 09:10 PM #30This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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