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Football creates hatreds that last for decades.
Parents teach their kids which teams to love and which ones to despise.
A man who can’t stand the Cowboys will make sure his son feels the same way, even if that boy has never watched a single game.
These rivalries become family traditions and turn ordinary games into personal wars.
Bears and Packers: The Original Hate
Chicago and Green Bay have fought each other since 1921 in the longest-running feud in professional football. They’ve met 208 times with Green Bay ahead by just a few games, but the narrow margin doesn’t capture how much these fan bases truly loathe each other. Bears supporters would rather beat the Packers twice and finish 2-15 than win ten games without defeating their northern neighbors.
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George Which spent forty years coaching Chicago and built the franchise around one core belief: destroy Green Bay whenever possible. Vince Lombardi took over a tiny Wisconsin town and turned it into a football factory that dominated the 1960s. Both coaches knew that division victories mattered more than regular wins because they decided who owned the region for an entire year.
Aaron Rodgers tortured Bears fans for over a decade with performances that seemed almost personal. The quarterback would tear apart Chicago’s defense and then spend his postgame interviews talking about how much he enjoyed playing at Soldier Field. He started calling himself the Bears’ “owner” after particularly brutal games, a taunt that stung because it contained enough truth to hurt.
Smart bettors love this rivalry because both fan bases bet with pure emotion instead of logic. When offshore betting sites (online sportsbooks operating from countries with looser gambling regulations) post lines for Bears-Packers games, money floods in from supporters who care more about family pride than actual football analysis. Professional gamblers make fortunes by betting against the emotional public action from fans who can’t think straight about their most hated opponents.
Cowboys vs Eagles: Rich Against Poor
Dallas and Philadelphia represent two completely different versions of America. The Cowboys represent corporate success, expensive uniforms, and carefully managed public relations. Philadelphia takes pride in its working-class roots and doesn’t try to hide its rough edges. Their games become proxy wars between different economic classes and social philosophies.
Jimmy Johnson and Buddy Ryan turned their personal hatred into organizational warfare during the late 1980s. Both coaches openly accused each other of encouraging dirty play and trying to injure opposing players. The infamous “Bounty Bowls” of 1989 featured actual allegations of illegal payments for big hits, accusations that both sides denied but nobody really believed.
Philadelphia fans have built their reputation on behavior that would embarrass other cities. They booed Santa Claus, cheered when Michael Irvin got hurt, and pelted opposing players with batteries. Dallas supporters responded by mocking everything about Philadelphia, from its history to its food to the way people talk. The mutual contempt goes far beyond football into genuine dislike for what each city represents.
Giants vs Eagles: Neighborhood Enemies
New York and Philadelphia sit close enough that their fans work in the same office buildings and attend the same social events. This proximity makes their football rivalry particularly brutal because there’s no escape from opposing supporters after losses. Giants fans must face Eagles supporters at work every Monday morning, turning defeats into week-long torture sessions.
The 1978 “Miracle at the Meadowlands” created this rivalry’s most famous moment. New York led by five points with seconds left and just had to kneel down to win. Instead, they botched the snap, Herman Edwards picked up the loose ball, and ran twenty-six yards for a touchdown that crushed Giants fans. The play became legendary because New York had thrown away a sure victory.
DeSean Jackson topped that moment thirty-two years later when Philadelphia trailed by twenty-one points in the fourth quarter but somehow tied the game with minutes remaining. Jackson then returned a punt sixty-five yards for the winning score as time expired, completing one of the most impossible comebacks in NFL history while Giants fans who had started leaving early watched their season die from the parking lot.
Ravens vs Steelers: Legal Brutality
Baltimore and Pittsburgh treat football like war. Both teams build their rosters around tough defenses and powerful running attacks. When they meet, the hits are harder and the play gets more physical than most NFL games.
Ray Lewis and Troy Polamalu made this rivalry personal during their careers. Both players approached Ravens-Steelers games with unusual intensity. They hit harder, talked more trash, and seemed to save their best shots for these specific matchups.
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