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[1]Skip to main content
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[2]GQ
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[3]GQ
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[4]STYLE
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[5]SHOPPING
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[23]CULTURE
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[33]GQ Sports
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How to Finally Divorce Your Toxic Sports Team
|
||||
|
||||
Of all the relationships in life, none is more unrequited than the one we have
|
||||
with the teams we love the most. One writer learns how to extricate himself
|
||||
from the senseless pain and suffering of his fandom
|
||||
By [34]Tom Lamont
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||||
April 15, 2025
|
||||
Image may contain François Walthry Book Comics Publication Adult Person Baby
|
||||
Face and Head
|
||||
Illustrations (throughout) by Zohar Lazar
|
||||
Save
|
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Save
|
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|
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This story was featured in The Must Read, a newsletter in which our editors
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recommend one can’t-miss story every weekday. [37]Sign up here to get it in
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your inbox.
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━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
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About a year ago, while watching his team lose a must-win game, a fan of the
|
||||
Dallas Cowboys named CJ Boyd removed his replica jersey, balled it tight, and
|
||||
hurled it off the balcony of his apartment in DeSoto, Texas. While his partner
|
||||
looked on, filming Boyd’s tantrum on her phone, he chased his floating jersey
|
||||
outside, where he picked it up to hurl it farther along the street. He was
|
||||
topless. It was winter. Boyd didn’t feel the cold, he told me, for misery. The
|
||||
clip of his outburst circulated online, and when I watched it I thought: Yeah,
|
||||
that captures it—the circular pain of a fully felt love for a sports team, the
|
||||
seeming impossibility of escape. In the video, Boyd marches up and down the
|
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street renouncing, then retrieving, the jersey, never able to throw it far
|
||||
enough to be free.
|
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|
||||
When a spark has gone, lovers may separate and spouses divorce. Businesses are
|
||||
dissolved all the time without acrimony. Friends quietly stop texting one
|
||||
another. We abandon unsatisfactory jobs, apartments, political parties. Why
|
||||
should it be different with a team?
|
||||
|
||||
Of all the many rules governing human behavior—stuff codified by law,
|
||||
etiquette, or religious decree to steady interpersonal relations—the only
|
||||
universal taboo I can think of that’s rational, legally sound, ethically
|
||||
neutral, yet carries the social equivalent of the noose is the ditching of a
|
||||
sports team. Among fans, there’s no excuse that will account for it. No exit
|
||||
papers or under-the-table permissions may be obtained. It’s bone-felt, beyond
|
||||
argument, and if you care to know anything about sports, you know that however
|
||||
degraded, bored, impoverished, or exhausted a fan may feel, their continued
|
||||
fidelity is expected, no matter what.
|
||||
|
||||
In Michigan, a few years ago, it made its way from local to national news that
|
||||
a family, the Carpos, had decided to give up the Detroit Lions, tired of years
|
||||
and years of losing. It was a sensation, an outrage. When David Cameron was on
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||||
the verge of being reelected British prime minister in 2015, commentators saw
|
||||
it as an awful portent that he could not seem to remember which fan base he
|
||||
belonged to: Hammers or Villans. Before the director Steve McQueen was underway
|
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on his name-making movie, 12 Years a Slave, he was fanatical about an English
|
||||
football team, Tottenham Hotspur. “I gave up football,” McQueen told an
|
||||
interviewer in January 2014. “It affected my day too much. It’s just stupid.”
|
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Within a couple months of that unusual admission, McQueen was the proud owner
|
||||
of an Oscar for best picture. A Tottenham fan myself—affected by it, made
|
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stupid by it—I imagined a cosmic link between the two events. In renunciation,
|
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McQueen seemed to have found peace, and reward.
|
||||
|
||||
That was a decade ago, and also when I first started to dream about bailing
|
||||
out, imagining the many ways the emotion and ambition I wasted on a sports team
|
||||
might be better spent. I felt like a reasonably well functioning adult, a fun
|
||||
parent, a listening spouse, a reliable wage earner…. But only till about 3 p.m.
|
||||
on a Saturday, at which point I became a pacing, pink, grudge-holding bore with
|
||||
a fuse the length of a fingernail. I was perfectly prepared to obliterate all
|
||||
sorts of cheerful occasions with thermonuclear sulks about sporting contests I
|
||||
had no control over.
|
||||
|
||||
I knew that lifelong fans, periodically swearing off, almost always came back.
|
||||
I dredged newspaper archives and the internet for examples of successful
|
||||
separations like McQueen’s, but there wasn’t much out there. In the 2010s, an
|
||||
English fan called Adam Thompson finally tired of his team, Wolverhampton
|
||||
Wanderers, and sought a parting. He registered a WordPress blog—How to Divorce
|
||||
Your Football Team: A Social Experiment in Leaving Your First True Love—and
|
||||
charted his efforts to begin again. There were field trips. Even flirtations.
|
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The blog fizzled out.
|
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|
||||
When I contacted Thompson to ask what happened to his experiment, he told me he
|
||||
got cold feet. Boyd, the man in Texas, said that if the Dallas Cowboys were a
|
||||
girlfriend, he would have broken up with them years ago. But this was sports,
|
||||
where sticking it out or dying can seem the only options available to
|
||||
malcontents. Could anything be done?
|
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|
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━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
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There is a sentiment in Korean sport: The fan doesn’t choose the team; instead,
|
||||
the team chooses the fan. If this is true, then Tottenham took a roundabout
|
||||
route to get me. My dad grew up in Scotland. As a boy he cheered for Aberdeen
|
||||
FC, which occupies a crumbling redbrick stadium on the sandy banks of the North
|
||||
Sea. When he moved to London, he was a lonely provincial teenager in need of
|
||||
work and friends. He tried to assimilate in a hurry, and various severings of
|
||||
identity took place. He anglicized his accent. He told fibs about his
|
||||
upbringing. Out went the old team, and after he met my mother, he took up
|
||||
supporting Tottenham, whose players used to visit the special-needs school
|
||||
where she worked. That gesture was enough to plant something in him that he
|
||||
later planted in me. So we were Tottenham fans.
|
||||
|
||||
For as long as I can think, my relationship with the team has been anxious,
|
||||
angular, a bit wrongheaded, a bit much. At the first live game I went to, a
|
||||
player from the visiting team turned to the home fans and threw out an arm in a
|
||||
fascist salute. He also mimed having a Hitler mustache. These were stunning
|
||||
gestures in a stadium full of Jewish North Londoners like me. Nothing has been
|
||||
neat or shapely about following the team since. Season after season, my dad and
|
||||
I ground our teeth and ground it out, celebrating some, chuntering more. He
|
||||
died in 2022, just days after the end of a reasonably successful campaign by
|
||||
our standards. My dad and I had enjoyed four, maybe five, such golden seasons,
|
||||
spread out over the 30-plus years we doggedly followed the team. Were they
|
||||
enough, the scattered good times?
|
||||
|
||||
One of his mates came to his funeral wearing a Tottenham jersey. I remember
|
||||
thinking how odd it was, that a team could take root in someone’s identity to
|
||||
such an extent, finding purchase in my dad where religion, music, luxury,
|
||||
literature never did. I remember wondering as I said goodbye whether this was
|
||||
the time to say goodbye to our shared team too. By 2024 I was more determined:
|
||||
a parent to growing children of my own, children who watched me celebrate or
|
||||
pace the corridors of our home, mysteriously elated, inexplicably upset. I took
|
||||
my son to watch Tottenham play our loathed local rivals, Arsenal, and we fell
|
||||
behind 1-0, 2-0, then 3-0 in the first half. Gremlin-y Arsenal fans howled at
|
||||
us from their section. There was something in my son’s flushed face, a
|
||||
frustration that I had no power to relieve, that made me decide: enough.
|
||||
|
||||
Fan to fan, we are conditioned to admire unconditionality, a devotion that’ll
|
||||
withstand any stress. The most exemplary fans are not the winningest or the
|
||||
most neatly coordinated, nor those that travel in large, uncomplaining packs.
|
||||
The exemplars are the undernourished loyalists who hang around when there’s
|
||||
little to no encouragement for them to do so. I think of Ron “Crackman”
|
||||
Crachiola, that immortally optimistic Detroit Lions fan, or that much televised
|
||||
booster of the New York Jets, Edwin “Fireman Ed” Anzalone, both of whom have
|
||||
clung on, costumed, hoarse, through actual decades of false dawns. Dawg
|
||||
Pounders with your heads in your hands at Huntington Bank Field, a stadium
|
||||
known in Cleveland as the Factory of Sadness: I see you too. Broadly, there is
|
||||
peer-to-peer sympathy for all of these franchises—Lions fans, Vikings fans,
|
||||
Sabres fans, Kings fans—and their collective centuries of waiting.
|
||||
|
||||
We have to be impressed by such devotion. Me, I’m also put in mind of tales of
|
||||
prisoners or kidnap victims, so accustomed to their jails they might refuse a
|
||||
means of escape. Logic is not meant to be a part of the true fan’s equipment.
|
||||
Applying logic to our situations, 99 out of 100 of us would start a mighty bin
|
||||
fire, burning the keepsakes. I wish I’d asked my dad how he did it, severing
|
||||
himself from his boyhood team.
|
||||
|
||||
Even without that guidance, resolutions took shape for me through the summer of
|
||||
2024. I needed to at least try to break it off, stop this reflexive way of
|
||||
thinking of the team as an extension of myself. When another season began in
|
||||
August, I refused friends’ offers of tickets. I kept away from screens during
|
||||
matches where I reasonably could. If I failed, I’d at least leave the
|
||||
beginnings of a trail, something for future escapees to follow.
|
||||
|
||||
I stayed quiet on text chains and left WhatsApp groups—swearing off the
|
||||
bumblebee emoji, never expecting to be “buzzing” about a goal again. I
|
||||
accepted, glumly, that some of my friendships would suffer in the short term. I
|
||||
warned my only brother I’d be taking a holiday of indefinite duration from our
|
||||
team. What next? Actual holiday, putting miles between myself and the home
|
||||
stadium? Hypnosis? I thought I might try laughing at the whole situation. On
|
||||
paper, intense fandom is absurd.
|
||||
|
||||
I reached out to an online comedian named Isaac Barron, who produces videos
|
||||
throughout the NFL season in which he plays a distraught sports fan. Tears
|
||||
streaming down his face, Barron pleads for release: “I can’t take this no
|
||||
more…. Every year I go through this…. I’m sorry about the TV.” Barron puts in
|
||||
such a persuasive performance that I had to call him out as a fraud. There’s
|
||||
legitimate pain here, I insisted. Barron, another Cowboys lifer, laughed. At
|
||||
least 50 percent of the anguish is legit, he said. Barron’s wife, Shannon, told
|
||||
me that he had ruined a date, years earlier, by hiding in his bedroom and
|
||||
crying over a loss. Sketch comedy was a compromise they’d dreamed up, a form of
|
||||
catharsis. “The tears come from the fan in me,” Barron said. “The actor in me
|
||||
pushes them.” He’d made himself find humor in what might otherwise be breaking
|
||||
his heart.
|
||||
|
||||
If humor wasn’t my way out, maybe I could deaden myself with cool, professional
|
||||
distance. John Powers, a sportswriter at The Boston Globe, told me how he’d
|
||||
extricated himself from fandom: by becoming a sportswriter and forcing himself
|
||||
to turn neutral. His colleague Dan Shaughnessy, who grew up outside Boston and
|
||||
has written about the Red Sox for the Globe for over 40 years, said something
|
||||
similar. “If I’m covering a game, the Red Sox lose, I need to be able to tell
|
||||
the readers why they lost,” Shaughnessy told me. “When my head hits the pillow
|
||||
it doesn’t matter whether they won or lost, except for the story. I’m rooting
|
||||
for the story.”
|
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|
||||
I had tried laughing, like Barron; now I tried rooting for the most dramatic
|
||||
narrative around my team, whatever that might be. It was a Sunday in October.
|
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Tottenham were playing away. We were up 2-0 at halftime and the best story,
|
||||
following Shaughnessy’s theory, would be a dramatic three-goal comeback by the
|
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opposition. When exactly that happened, it felt dreadful as always, an ache
|
||||
that made its way around the belly, groin, molars.
|
||||
|
||||
I was at a family lunch that Sunday. My sister-in-law, a therapist, asked why,
|
||||
if I truly wanted out, I hadn’t sought counseling yet. Embarrassment wasn’t
|
||||
reason enough to keep dragging my feet. Googling, I came across a therapist
|
||||
named Christina DeCoux, who is based in Los Angeles. A particular sentence on
|
||||
DeCoux’s website caught my eye: “People often seek me out because they are
|
||||
feeling stuck in a painful emotional pattern that just won’t let go.”
|
||||
|
||||
Image may contain Book Comics Publication Person Accessories Glasses Box
|
||||
Clothing Footwear Shoe and Cartoon
|
||||
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
|
||||
|
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I booked a consultation with DeCoux and we spoke over video. I explained my
|
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predicament and we talked about what I might like to achieve. I said I just
|
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wanted to leave it all behind with some dignity on both sides, affectionate
|
||||
memories in tact. I wanted a happy divorce.
|
||||
|
||||
I had just spent an afternoon with Ryan Ray, an insurance broker from England,
|
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who I thought might have the saddest story of any fan in the world. Ray and his
|
||||
mates followed their own boyhood club, Wimbledon FC, based for a century in
|
||||
southwest London, when it was moved by new owners to Milton Keynes, 60 miles
|
||||
north of London. Fans who decided to keep their allegiance local reinstituted a
|
||||
new club in the neighborhood called AFC Wimbledon. The old team that moved
|
||||
north became MK Dons, taking with it the players and, in theory, the status and
|
||||
history…plus Ray and a smattering of original fans. Supporters on either side
|
||||
of this angry divide insist it is the other lot who are the deserters. “I don’t
|
||||
open my mouth anymore,” Ray says. “ ‘Ah, who do you support, then?’ I don’t
|
||||
bother answering. It’s not worth the hassle.”
|
||||
|
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Ray and I had come together to watch MK Dons play a cup game against AFC
|
||||
Wimbledon. Visiting fans traveled up in red double-decker buses, to emphasize
|
||||
their fundamental London-ness. In the stadium they sang a chant that ironically
|
||||
glamorized life in the capital (Champagne, cocaine, Ferraris) at the expense of
|
||||
the turncoats who’d left. “You’ve got bus stops and secondhand shops,” went one
|
||||
part of the chant, probably the nicest part. “Your clothes are shite and your
|
||||
haircut’s fucking weird.” As with many separations, dialogue had cheapened to
|
||||
insults, lists of bad traits, the once-unsayable things now exaggerated for
|
||||
maximum cruelty. After his team went down 1-0, then 2-0, Ray and I retreated to
|
||||
a windowless bar inside the stadium. “I look forward to it,” he said, “the six
|
||||
to eight weeks when I don’t have to focus on anything to do with this football
|
||||
club. I long for it.” Ray meant the offseason. “Sometimes I wish I could just
|
||||
sit there without any bias, without any interest—but it’s not me. I’m tribal.”
|
||||
|
||||
I mentioned this idea of tribalism to the therapist, DeCoux. I explained my
|
||||
conviction that the saddest, bleakest parts of the fan’s experience—the
|
||||
exaggerated grievances, the shortsighted bragging, the narrow delusion of being
|
||||
exceptional—were the parts bound up in tribal feeling. She said that whenever
|
||||
she watched her own husband watch sports—he was a New York Rangers fan—she was
|
||||
sometimes put in the mind of religious cults. DeCoux was raised inside a
|
||||
rule-bound evangelical church. She left in her 20s and made cult recovery one
|
||||
of her areas of focus as a therapist. “You wouldn’t know what songs to sing
|
||||
unless you were a part of the group,” DeCoux recalled of her church. “You had
|
||||
to perceive what were the correct things to say. If you were ever off message,
|
||||
you could feel the energy shift.”
|
||||
|
||||
She might have been describing any supporters’ pub in Newcastle or Bavaria; one
|
||||
of those stadium sections that are set aside for drum-banging, flares,
|
||||
ride-or-die piety. DeCoux continued: “Of course, the one thing you can’t say
|
||||
is, ‘I’m not sure I want to follow along with you guys anymore. I’m changing
|
||||
cults.’ Because that would be immediate social exclusion.” She described a
|
||||
commonly reported reason that people give for staying in cults: the sunk cost
|
||||
fallacy. “People can’t leave because they’ve spent so much time and money and
|
||||
energy,” she explained.
|
||||
|
||||
I thought of Boyd, the jersey-throwing Cowboys fan, who described the NFL
|
||||
offseason to me as though talking through an obvious, yet completely
|
||||
irresistible, con. “Let’s say your guys get knocked out in January,” he said.
|
||||
“You’re pissed. You’re mad. I would guess that for the average fan it’s free
|
||||
agency when most of them start getting invested again. That piques the
|
||||
interest.” The seasonal reset creates a void. Optimism quickly fills it. The
|
||||
fan thinks, Maybe I’ll be a better member of this cult if I only believe
|
||||
harder, give over more of my money and my time. “Then roster cuts happen.
|
||||
Players get traded. It’s almost like a mind game, right? ‘Okay. This could
|
||||
work.’ And God forbid you have a good preseason.”
|
||||
|
||||
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
|
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|
||||
In November, DeCoux texted me to say she’d been pondering my case and she
|
||||
regretted likening it to extraction from a cult. The situation, she said, had
|
||||
more in common with addiction, the high highs, the low lows, the swearing-offs,
|
||||
the shame-inducing returns to the cookie jar. I was nodding. Could we talk?
|
||||
|
||||
“There are a couple of ways I know of looking at addiction,” she said. “One is,
|
||||
you [follow the spirit of] a 12-step program. You go totally sober. You aim to
|
||||
be sober forever. A lot of people in addiction would say this is the only way.
|
||||
There are other branches of treatment, known as harm reduction, where a
|
||||
therapist meets a person where they’re at. They try to reduce the harm that a
|
||||
substance is causing.” The idea, she continued, is to help a client use less,
|
||||
with greater control and greater awareness. “I would ask you, when you feel the
|
||||
out-of-control feelings, what do you believe about yourself? I would want to
|
||||
know: Which feeling comes up strongest? Give me an ‘I am’ statement.”
|
||||
|
||||
Smallness, I said.
|
||||
|
||||
“ ‘I am small,’ ” repeated DeCoux. “So it’s really about feeling like a child.
|
||||
Completely out of control of your destiny. Powerless.” She considered this. “I
|
||||
would say, maybe, your connection is linked to old childhood beliefs that need
|
||||
to be examined. When did it become clear that this was an identity for you?
|
||||
What were the experiences that made you form an identity around this team?”
|
||||
|
||||
I pondered it and told DeCoux that I found it hard to remember a time when it
|
||||
didn’t feel like a part of my identity. I couldn’t remember choosing tribes. As
|
||||
children, she said, we make a lot of meaning: “But if you don’t remember the
|
||||
meaning that was made, how do you even shift that? You have to go back. Find
|
||||
the meaning you made around the team.” There was always a rivalry dynamic, I
|
||||
said, between Tottenham and Arsenal, our North London rival. A sense of us and
|
||||
them; a big sibling/little sibling vibe. At my school there were Jewish kids
|
||||
and Greek kids. The Jews ended up in one class and the Greeks in the other. We
|
||||
were Tottenham, they were Arsenal. For seasons-long stretches at a time, all
|
||||
through my teenage years and into my 20s, Arsenal were the more successful of
|
||||
the teams. It was bad luck. It was agony.
|
||||
|
||||
As an adult, I always lived in flats and houses in enemy territory, within
|
||||
earshot of Arsenal’s stadium. The schools in these neighborhoods are Arsenal
|
||||
hothouses. The babysitters get busy indoctrinating your kids as soon as the
|
||||
front door shuts. On match days, main roads chock up with Arsenal fans,
|
||||
identifiable beneath their colors, I always think, because of a smugness of
|
||||
bearing that must come from their being part of a fan base that’s had a nice
|
||||
time of it over the years—that expects more glory as its due. (American readers
|
||||
will be unconsciously balling their fists picturing the Belichick-era
|
||||
Patriots.) No Tottenham fan of my generation thinks of glory as a right.
|
||||
Tottenham fans take nothing for granted and they are keenly aware of the
|
||||
entitlement of other fan bases. Whenever Tottenham play Arsenal, a starved
|
||||
chippiness smacks up against spoiled lordliness.
|
||||
|
||||
DeCoux would often talk about going back, in psychological terms, to the scene
|
||||
of the crimes. Had I ever been to a game in Arsenal’s stadium, for instance? In
|
||||
all these years, a lifetime, I hadn’t. And so, on an apocalyptic weather day
|
||||
that November, the sky dark with clouds, as if in judgment over a travesty, I
|
||||
went to sit among the home fans at Arsenal.
|
||||
|
||||
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
|
||||
|
||||
There will have been so many Red Sox fans who died in October 2004, only days
|
||||
or hours before the team turned the tide in its American League Championship
|
||||
Series against the Yankees, setting up a first World Series title in 86 years.
|
||||
During darker times, their optimism gravely tested, the frightened fan wonders:
|
||||
Why did this team choose me? Why the post-Aikman Cowboys? Why the Tottenham
|
||||
team that contracted mass food poisoning in 2006 on the eve of its most
|
||||
important game in years? Why wasn’t I chosen by Steph’s Warriors, Schumacher’s
|
||||
Ferrari, Messi’s Barca? Winning fans never ask themselves such questions.
|
||||
Winning fans are amnesiacs. They forget the random flights of ball or puck, the
|
||||
bad-breaking weather, the dumb injuries that must have caused them misery in
|
||||
the past. They ascribe their better times to tactics, organization,
|
||||
culture—whatever, to “championship DNA” or “winning mentality” or a dozen other
|
||||
press-conference clichés. Uh-huh, thinks the Mariners fan, 48 seasons and
|
||||
counting without a maiden World Series appearance, hearing about championship
|
||||
DNA. Oh sure, think fans of the Knicks, the Kings, the Hawks, decades without
|
||||
an NBA title. Why didn’t we think to have a mentality that prioritized winning
|
||||
when it would matter instead of losing when it would hurt the most?
|
||||
|
||||
Fans are pitiable if they try to ditch a team and damned absolutely if they
|
||||
ever try to swap. And yet players, coaches, even owners are permitted to drift
|
||||
between teams as opportunity or profit dictate. Magic Johnson, always a Lions
|
||||
fan, cheered on that team’s recent playoff defeat by the Washington Commanders,
|
||||
of which he owns a minority stake. Presidents have been quick to pardon
|
||||
themselves for straying. Nixon supported one NFL team while playing footsie
|
||||
with another. (You understand that I’m a Washington fan, he told Don Shula, the
|
||||
coach of the Miami Dolphins. “But I’m a part-time resident of Miami and I’ve
|
||||
been following the Dolphins real close….”) At around the same time, in the
|
||||
early 1970s, a young Bill Clinton, besotted with his college girlfriend, added
|
||||
Hillary’s Chicago Cubs to his own St. Louis Cardinals (bitterest of rivals) as
|
||||
the baseball teams he rooted for. Jimmy Carter switched from the Yankees to the
|
||||
Braves in the mid-1960s after they relocated to Atlanta and never looked back,
|
||||
though the exchange left him in the championship red over the rest of his long
|
||||
life—two World Series titles to the Yankees’ seven. As a boy, the director
|
||||
Spike Lee gave up the Mets for the Yankees. Again, those many, many titles.
|
||||
|
||||
Most fans stick, and if they don’t, they stay quiet. The Carpos, that family in
|
||||
Michigan who ditched the Lions, made the news because they’d elected to support
|
||||
the Kansas City Chiefs instead. Of all the eras in Taylor Swift’s life, one
|
||||
remains creatively underexplored: the time before she was a Chief, when she was
|
||||
an Eagle. There is a fascinating page on NamuWiki, the Korean-language
|
||||
Wikipedia, that outlines the philosophical case against abandoning one’s team.
|
||||
The act is known in Korea as 팀 세탁—team laundry—and it is understood to
|
||||
involve a paradox. You care enough, you want to put an end to your suffering.
|
||||
You care enough, you can’t. “If you have blue eyes,” said Shaughnessy, the
|
||||
sportswriter, “you have blue eyes.”
|
||||
|
||||
From my own empirical research, it does seem the body understands if denial is
|
||||
in play, that a sacrament is under threat. Sitting in the chilly stands at
|
||||
Arsenal, I fidgeted and sweated, feeling well beyond the pale. Next to me there
|
||||
was another displaced fan, a woman named Liubov Liushnenko, from Ukraine.
|
||||
Liushnenko’s swings in team allegiance had been so intense, I soon felt ashamed
|
||||
of my own discomfort. She was raised in the Ukrainian capital, the only
|
||||
daughter of a devout Dynamo Kyiv fan. Liushnenko baffled her father by becoming
|
||||
a fan of Dynamo’s hated rivals, Shakhtar Donetsk, who played 450 miles away, in
|
||||
the Donbas region. Her dad wanted to know why she’d made the decision. “I
|
||||
couldn’t explain,” she told me “I still can’t. If you love something you can’t
|
||||
explain.”
|
||||
|
||||
Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine changed Liushnenko’s life. She lost her job
|
||||
and lost friends to the army or migration. Before long she was persuaded by her
|
||||
parents to seek asylum in England. Staying in lodgings outside London, “I felt
|
||||
completely lost,” she said. Streams of Ukrainian football games, watched from
|
||||
her bedroom, helped. And over time it was football that made her feel more at
|
||||
home in her adopted country. She started playing for a lower-league team and
|
||||
took work as a coach for a charity called Fair Shot, which helps refugees find
|
||||
a place in English communities through football. Liushnenko took out her phone
|
||||
and showed me pictures of her parents. “I wanted to go back for New Year but my
|
||||
parents said no, not now. There’s no electricity. No heating. It’s a bad time.”
|
||||
|
||||
In the Arsenal stadium, pre-match theatrics were underway. The Clash’s “London
|
||||
Calling” rang out with its snarling lyric about battle and war. Fireworks
|
||||
popped on the grass and the air around us filled with the sharp smell of
|
||||
gunpowder. Liushnenko said that in Ukraine, the war had brought about a shock
|
||||
truce between the fans of Shakhtar Donetsk and Dynamo Kyiv. “When part of your
|
||||
country is occupied,” she said, “you cannot be enemies with each other. You
|
||||
cannot be enemies with yourself.”
|
||||
|
||||
We watched most of the match together, then I snuck out after halftime, feeling
|
||||
incongruous and grubby in that environment, chastened as well by Liushnenko’s
|
||||
example, trying to hear the right lessons in her story. Traveling home, I
|
||||
thought of what the therapist had said about us trying to cut certain cords
|
||||
that bound me to my team, working against negative feelings of anger, shame, or
|
||||
regret while retaining other, more positive associations: acknowledging the
|
||||
good. “I would want to see you go through a cycle of anger, then acceptance,”
|
||||
DeCoux said, “then get to some appreciation of what the team has done for you.”
|
||||
|
||||
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
|
||||
|
||||
It was obvious that I couldn’t just choose another team in the Premier League
|
||||
to support. But casually, that fall—just having some fun on the apps—I started
|
||||
seeing other sports. I watched YouTube reels of the World Series–bound Dodgers
|
||||
and dabbled in a trial subscription with the resurgent Knicks. When work took
|
||||
me to Hamburg, I showed up in the city’s pungent arena to watch its much-loved
|
||||
handball team. I texted the therapist: “We’re winning 6-5, I think. There’s a
|
||||
mascot dressed as a Dole banana.” Except when balls were successfully thrown
|
||||
into goals, I had no fucking idea what was happening, why we groaned as fans,
|
||||
why we regained our faith or sensed blood. I couldn’t follow the mysterious
|
||||
waves of belief and dread that take hold of people when a team matters so much
|
||||
to them they know its every mood, all blind spots, all flaws.
|
||||
|
||||
Around then, the Jacksonville Jaguars came to London to play an international
|
||||
game at Wembley Stadium. I showed up to sample the visiting NFL circus. Agents
|
||||
of a seductive Americana had been sent overseas to tempt in new fans. For an
|
||||
hour, I joined in with other mesmerized Londoners as we yelled locally flavored
|
||||
endearments at the Jaguars quarterback Trevor Lawrence. “G’wan, Trev! Get in,
|
||||
Trevah.” Floridan cheerleaders tried their best to look like they wanted to be
|
||||
dancing under drizzle in a stadium that’s usually configured for English
|
||||
football. Bros in tracksuits bazooka-ed T-shirts at the crowd. The men behind
|
||||
me were doggedly checking Premier League scores by phone, grumbling about the
|
||||
consequences for their fantasy teams. It was a novelty to be able to drink in
|
||||
our seats, an indulgence imported from overseas, and people got very drunk. Our
|
||||
section started to smell like a wet ashtray.
|
||||
|
||||
As the Jags pulled away, my attention started roving around the stadium. I’d
|
||||
been here often in support of Tottenham and I found old landmarks, picked at
|
||||
old wounds. Down there. That was where I sat to watch a 5-1 annihilation in a
|
||||
can’t-lose semifinal. Up there, in the eaves. That’s where I closed my eyes
|
||||
while Lionel Messi and his Barcelona teammates ate us for dinner. The
|
||||
humiliations lingered keenly. The losses were more alive in memory than the
|
||||
wins. I realized that having begun this trial separation, having started to
|
||||
make strides toward indifference, I was starting to miss the pain.
|
||||
|
||||
DeCoux was interested to hear it at our next session, though not greatly
|
||||
surprised. Look at the faces of people at sports events, she said. Look at what
|
||||
they do with their bodies, the tactility, the tears. Sport seems to open up a
|
||||
rare space for people, especially men, to emote in public. It gives people a
|
||||
way to indulge what they might otherwise be suppressing—grief included.
|
||||
|
||||
Image may contain Art Cleaning Person and Painting
|
||||
|
||||
One weekend, I traveled to Aberdeen in Scotland where my dad grew up. I had a
|
||||
ticket to watch his boyhood team. Maybe there were answers for me
|
||||
there—compatible blood. Policemen frisked us at the stadium gate, checking
|
||||
pockets, checking socks. One teenager had a bottle of beer pulled out of his
|
||||
hood. At least a hundred men were smoking in a tight, high-walled gully that
|
||||
ran between the outer ramparts and the stands.
|
||||
|
||||
I had a place in the hard-core section. Beside me, an elderly man, about the
|
||||
age my dad would have been, ate two chocolate bars and a bag of cheese crackers
|
||||
in silence, methodically tossing the empty packaging at my shins, possibly in
|
||||
provocation. I opened and ate a KitKat, also in silence, adding to the litter
|
||||
under my feet, a bid for acceptance that seemed to work. Soon a huge
|
||||
white-and-red flag was dragged over our section. A fan with a bass drum started
|
||||
up a regular thump, about the rate of an excitable heartbeat. As enthusiasm in
|
||||
the stadium began to grow, the flag was whipped away at just the moment the
|
||||
fans around me burst into song. The drumming and the singing did not let up
|
||||
till halftime. The home team, my dad’s team, played with flair, winning
|
||||
handsomely, and the terrace chants echoed in my head for hours afterward. I
|
||||
walked away along the seafront, eating a mince-and-oatmeal pie, his favorite.
|
||||
|
||||
It was an ideal evening of sport. As meet-cutes go, the circumstances could not
|
||||
have been more propitious for second love if the whole thing was scripted by
|
||||
Austen or Ephron. I came away stimulated, all my senses fed, glad to have made
|
||||
the pilgrimage. When I asked my heart a question, whether it could love this
|
||||
other team, the answer was unequivocal, as clear as the drum: No chance.
|
||||
|
||||
While I was in Scotland, I texted Adam Thompson, the Wolverhampton Wanderers
|
||||
fan who’d written the divorce blog all those years ago. In the end, not only
|
||||
did Thompson renew his vows, he sealed them in ink—he now has a W.W. tattoo—as
|
||||
if in apology for straying. CJ Boyd has team tattoos of his own: massive,
|
||||
palm-size Dallas Cowboys stars on either pectoral. Try divorcing those. I would
|
||||
suggest that—with respect to Spike Lee, the Carpos in Michigan, and at least
|
||||
three former US presidents—the swappers are outliers. You can’t choose the
|
||||
team. The team chooses you.
|
||||
|
||||
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
|
||||
|
||||
It was January. My team hobbled into another new year, embarking on a
|
||||
historically terrible run, oblivious as to whether I was following the endless
|
||||
carnival or not. A friend had coined the term “low-power mode” (as when your
|
||||
iPhone downshifts to suck up less energy) to describe my renegotiated
|
||||
commitment to Tottenham, and I seized on his words like serious praise. What
|
||||
would seem a blunt desertion to some, a fuss over nothing to others, felt to me
|
||||
a small, treasurable achievement. On the night of a bad loss to Arsenal, I
|
||||
wasn’t there, I wasn’t pacing in front of a screen; I was out at dinner with
|
||||
friends. We spoke of Zuckerberg and Musk, ceasefires and wildfires. Los
|
||||
Angeles’ NFL teams had lost in the January playoffs, as though making dignified
|
||||
withdrawals to focus on more important matters. Perspective, if you wanted it,
|
||||
was easily found that month.
|
||||
|
||||
“You can never just leave something completely behind. It’s always a part of
|
||||
you,” DeCoux had told me. That was the day her son wandered in, mid-session, to
|
||||
say goodbye to her before leaving for school. The three of us fell into
|
||||
conversation. DeCoux explained that we were discussing “sport and feelings,”
|
||||
and the boy made a brilliant noise, a weary groan with a rising note at the
|
||||
end: really? He was at the outset of his own journey as a fan, with a curated
|
||||
roster of teams he loved. I asked if he followed English football and he said
|
||||
he did. He had even picked out a team.
|
||||
|
||||
“You’re kidding,” I said, when he told me which one. “Why us?”
|
||||
|
||||
The boy gave a few reasons. It wasn’t important. Why anyone?
|
||||
|
||||
I notice now that I’d made unthinking use of that word us. Months later, did I
|
||||
feel the same? DeCoux had warned that, from all she knew of helping cult
|
||||
leavers, separating couples, and addicts in recovery, forswearing could be
|
||||
difficult. She suggested I might work toward a more realistic goal of peaceful
|
||||
coexistence. In her own case, she no longer felt angry toward the cult that
|
||||
raised her, only distant. In my case, I might consider it progress if I could
|
||||
walk past Tottenham’s stadium, my old Tottenham pubs, and think: Good for them.
|
||||
|
||||
At the end of the month, I walked from enemy into friendly territory, trying my
|
||||
hardest to recategorize the landscape as neutral, scrubbing it free of tribal
|
||||
lines. I walked a few miles to Tottenham’s stadium, passing landmarks dear to
|
||||
me: Seven Sisters station; the High Cross pub; Tottenham Bagels; the clock over
|
||||
the old Whitbread brewery, the one without hands or numbers—a grimly
|
||||
appropriate symbol, I always used to think, as frustrating seasons amassed.
|
||||
Like a chain-smoking ex-lover, lingering on some significant curb, I stood
|
||||
outside the Beehive bar, remembering bouncing up and down with pure joy as
|
||||
other delirious fans ripped plywood paneling off the walls, wanting keepsakes.
|
||||
|
||||
It was midafternoon. A match was scheduled for the evening. Stewards were
|
||||
beginning to drag fencing into the traffic-free zone beyond the
|
||||
discount-sportswear shop. A burger chef in team colors was fixing a tablecloth
|
||||
into place on the pickle station next to Chunky Chips. The keenest fans were
|
||||
assembling, hours early, muttering to one another on public benches, treating
|
||||
nerves with tinned beer. Good for them, I thought.
|
||||
|
||||
Tom Lamont is a GQ correspondent.
|
||||
|
||||
A version of this story originally appeared in the April 2025 issue of GQ with
|
||||
the title “Hi, my name is Tom and I’m addicted to the senseless pain and
|
||||
suffering of being a sports fan.”
|
||||
|
||||
[38]
|
||||
Image may contain Ben Affleck Advertisement Poster Formal Wear Clothing Suit
|
||||
Adult Person Accessories and Tie
|
||||
[39]Tom Lamont is a GQ correspondent. He is a frequent contributor to the
|
||||
Guardian's Long Read desk and the author of the novel Going Home. He lives in
|
||||
north London with his wife and two children. ... [40]Read more
|
||||
|
||||
Related Stories for GQ[41]The Must Read[42]GQ Sports
|
||||
Read More
|
||||
|
||||
• [43]
|
||||
The Agony of Being a Celtics Fan in New York Right Now
|
||||
Culture
|
||||
The Agony of Being a Celtics Fan in New York Right Now
|
||||
By Josh Gondelman
|
||||
• [44]
|
||||
14 Seasons In, WNBA Legend Nneka Ogwumike Still Isn’t Thinking About the
|
||||
End
|
||||
GQ Sports
|
||||
14 Seasons In, WNBA Legend Nneka Ogwumike Still Isn’t Thinking About the
|
||||
End
|
||||
By Matthew Roberson
|
||||
• [45]
|
||||
No Helmets, No Pads, Full Tackling. Is This the Future of Football?
|
||||
GQ Sports
|
||||
No Helmets, No Pads, Full Tackling. Is This the Future of Football?
|
||||
By Jordan Teicher
|
||||
• [46]
|
||||
What Trail Running In Wyoming With Serious Pros Taught Me About Life,
|
||||
Endurance and Competition
|
||||
Culture
|
||||
What Trail Running In Wyoming With Serious Pros Taught Me About Life,
|
||||
Endurance and Competition
|
||||
By Chris Black
|
||||
|
||||
[47]GQ
|
||||
Since 1957, GQ has inspired men to look sharper and live smarter with its
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unparalleled coverage of style, culture, and beyond. From award-winning writing
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and photography to binge-ready videos to electric live events, GQ meets
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• [48]
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||||
• [49]
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||||
• [50]
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||||
• [51]
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||||
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United States
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||||
• [78]U.K.
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||||
• [79]Korea
|
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• [80]Germany
|
||||
• [81]Mexico
|
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• [82]Taiwan
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• [83]Turkey
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• [94]Thailand
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|
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References:
|
||||
|
||||
[1] https://www.gq.com/story/how-to-finally-divorce-your-toxic-sports-team#main-content
|
||||
[2] https://www.gq.com/gqsports
|
||||
[3] https://www.gq.com/gqsports
|
||||
[4] https://www.gq.com/style
|
||||
[5] https://www.gq.com/gq-recommends
|
||||
[6] https://www.gq.com/culture
|
||||
[7] https://www.gq.com/grooming
|
||||
[8] https://www.gq.com/wellness
|
||||
[9] https://www.gq.com/gqsports
|
||||
[10] https://gqbox.com/?utm_source=gq-online&utm_medium=edit&utm_campaign=gqb-site-global-nav
|
||||
[11] https://www.gq.com/video
|
||||
[12] https://www.gq.com/newsletters?sourceCode=navbar
|
||||
[13] https://www.gq.com/style
|
||||
[14] https://www.gq.com/gq-recommends
|
||||
[15] https://www.gq.com/new-arrivals-menswear-2025
|
||||
[16] https://www.gq.com/best-new-menswear-under-250
|
||||
[17] https://www.gq.com/office-style-edit
|
||||
[18] https://www.gq.com/editor-wishlists
|
||||
[19] https://www.gq.com/watch-shop-2025
|
||||
[20] https://www.gq.com/sneaker-shop
|
||||
[21] https://www.gq.com/best-menswear-sales
|
||||
[22] https://www.gq.com/gq-recommends
|
||||
[23] https://www.gq.com/culture
|
||||
[24] https://www.gq.com/grooming
|
||||
[25] https://www.gq.com/wellness
|
||||
[26] https://www.gq.com/gqsports
|
||||
[27] https://gqbox.com/?utm_source=gq-online&utm_medium=edit&utm_campaign=gqb-site-global-nav
|
||||
[28] https://www.gq.com/video
|
||||
[29] https://www.gq.com/newsletters
|
||||
[30] https://www.gq.com/
|
||||
[31] https://www.gq.com/search
|
||||
[32] https://www.gq.com/auth/initiate?redirectURL=%2Fstory%2Fhow-to-finally-divorce-your-toxic-sports-team&source=VERSO_NAVIGATION
|
||||
[33] https://www.gq.com/gqsports
|
||||
[34] https://www.gq.com/contributor/tom-lamont
|
||||
[37] https://www.gq.com/newsletter/mustRead?newsletterId=249017&sourcecode=articleCTA
|
||||
[38] https://www.gq.com/v2/offers/gqa01001?source=Site_0_GQM_EDT_GQM_IN_ARTICLE_TOUT_0_MARCH_ISSUE_2025_ZZ
|
||||
[39] https://www.gq.com/contributor/tom-lamont
|
||||
[40] https://www.gq.com/contributor/tom-lamont
|
||||
[41] https://www.gq.com/about/the-must-read
|
||||
[42] https://www.gq.com/about/sports
|
||||
[43] https://www.gq.com/story/celtics-essay-josh-gondelman#intcid=_gq-article-bottom-recirc_95b95ccb-471e-44af-9aa8-7a57f791a3e1_text2vec1
|
||||
[44] https://www.gq.com/story/nneka-ogwumike-seattle-storm-interview-2025#intcid=_gq-article-bottom-recirc_95b95ccb-471e-44af-9aa8-7a57f791a3e1_text2vec1
|
||||
[45] https://www.gq.com/story/no-helmets-no-pads-full-tackling-is-this-the-future-of-football#intcid=_gq-article-bottom-recirc_95b95ccb-471e-44af-9aa8-7a57f791a3e1_text2vec1
|
||||
[46] https://www.gq.com/story/trail-running-in-wyoming#intcid=_gq-article-bottom-recirc_95b95ccb-471e-44af-9aa8-7a57f791a3e1_text2vec1
|
||||
[47] https://www.gq.com/
|
||||
[48] https://instagram.com/gq/
|
||||
[49] https://www.youtube.com/user/gqvideos/
|
||||
[50] https://www.facebook.com/gq/
|
||||
[51] https://twitter.com/gqmagazine/
|
||||
[52] https://www.tiktok.com/@gq
|
||||
[54] https://www.gq.com/info/about-gq
|
||||
[55] https://www.gq.com/newsletters
|
||||
[56] https://subscribe.gq.com/subscribe/gq/116729
|
||||
[57] https://www.gq.com/story/wardrobe-essentials-for-men-2025
|
||||
[58] https://www.gq.com/story/best-colognes-for-men
|
||||
[59] https://www.gq.com/story/best-stuff-beard-trimmers
|
||||
[60] https://www.gq.com/story/best-electric-shavers
|
||||
[61] https://www.gq.com/story/best-body-hair-trimmers
|
||||
[62] https://www.gq.com/story/the-best-loafers-for-men
|
||||
[63] https://www.gq.com/story/best-shampoo-for-men-for-every-type-of-hair
|
||||
[65] https://www.gq.com/account/profile
|
||||
[66] https://www.condenast.com/careers/
|
||||
[67] https://www.gq.com/services/presscenter
|
||||
[68] http://www.condenast.com/brands/gq/
|
||||
[69] https://www.gq.com/story/masthead
|
||||
[70] https://www.gq.com/feed/rss
|
||||
[71] https://www.gq.com/story/accessibility-help
|
||||
[72] https://www.condenaststore.com/
|
||||
[73] https://www.condenast.com/user-agreement/
|
||||
[74] http://www.condenast.com/privacy-policy#privacypolicy
|
||||
[75] http://www.condenast.com/privacy-policy#privacypolicy-california
|
||||
[76] http://www.aboutads.info/
|
||||
[78] https://www.gq-magazine.co.uk/
|
||||
[79] https://www.gqkorea.co.kr/
|
||||
[80] https://www.gq-magazin.de/
|
||||
[81] https://www.gq.com.mx/
|
||||
[82] https://www.gq.com.tw/
|
||||
[83] https://gq.com.tr/
|
||||
[84] http://www.gq.com.cn/
|
||||
[85] https://www.gqitalia.it/
|
||||
[86] https://www.gq.co.za/
|
||||
[87] http://www.gqportugal.pt/
|
||||
[88] https://gq.globo.com/
|
||||
[89] https://www.gqmagazine.fr/
|
||||
[90] https://www.gq.com.au/
|
||||
[91] https://www.revistagq.com/
|
||||
[92] https://www.gqindia.com/
|
||||
[93] https://www.gqjapan.jp/
|
||||
[94] https://www.gqthailand.com/
|
||||
[95] https://www.gqmiddleeast.com/
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user