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Kiz vs. Newman: Should the Rockies ban Cubs fans from Coors Field?

Colorado hosts Chicago for a three-game set Monday through Wednesday after meeting last week at Wrigley Field

  • Chicago Cubs fans celebrate winning the game against Colorado Rockies...

    Hyoung Chang, The Denver Post

    Chicago Cubs fans celebrate winning the game against Colorado Rockies at Coors Field on Aug. 8, 2009. Chicago won 6-5.

  • Chicago Cubs first baseman Anthony Rizzo ...

    John Leyba, Denver Post file

    Chicago Cubs first baseman Anthony Rizzo (44) signs for Cubs fans before their game against the Colorado Rockies on May 9, 2017, in Denver, Colorado at Coors Field.

  • Mark Schuwerk, left, and his wife Mandy, right, argued a...

    Karl Gehring, Denver Post file

    Mark Schuwerk, left, and his wife Mandy, right, argued a call from their seats above third-base Friday night. Because the Cubs have a nationwide following their fans pack Coors Field every time Chicago plays in Colorado. The Colorado Rockies hosted the Chicago Cubs at Coors Field Friday night, August 7, 2009.

  • Cubs fans looking for an autograph watched batting practice Friday...

    Karl Gehring, Denver Post file

    Cubs fans looking for an autograph watched batting practice Friday night. Because the Cubs have a nationwide following their fans pack Coors Field every time Chicago plays in Colorado. The Colorado Rockies hosted the Chicago Cubs at Coors Field Friday night, August 7, 2009.

  • Chicago Cubs fans Adam Kling, left, and his father Steve...

    Hyoung Chang, The Denver Post

    Chicago Cubs fans Adam Kling, left, and his father Steve from Chicago are celebrate winning of the game against Colorado Rockies at Coors Field on Aug. 8, 2009. Chicago won 6-5.

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Kyle Newman, digital prep sports editor for The Denver Post.
PUBLISHED: | UPDATED:

QUESTION: Should the Rockies ban Cubs fans from Coors Field?

Kiz: They’re baaack! With the smell of Old Style on their breath and all the arrogance earned from winning a single championship in the last century, Cubs fans are back in force at Coors Field. These are the transplants who weren’t tough enough to put up with Chicago winters, but now want everyone in Denver to believe an ever-lasting love for the North Side runs through their veins. Why do we have to put up with this nonsense?

Newman: Gee Kiz, it sounds like Nolan Arenado isn’t the only one who is highly perturbed that the Rockies’ home turns into Wrigley Field West every time Chicago rolls into town. But hey, it’s hard to knock their passion. The games have a different intensity when the Cubs are here because Rockies fans, bless their Rooftop-loving souls, just don’t bring the same energy that the W flag-flying faithful do — at home or on the road.

Kiz: I’m a product of the Midwest and the son of a Cubs fan. My father risked life and limb back in the 1960s to install a television antenna the size of a pterodactyl on the roof of our house northern Indiana so he could watch a very snowy picture of Ron Santo playing third base and listen to Jack Brickhouse calling the games on WGN. So I get it. The Cubbies are an incurable addiction. It’s cute in Wrigleyville. It’s annoying in LoDo.

Longtime Colorado Rockies fan Mabel Miyasaka, ...
Helen H. Richardson, The Denver Post
Longtime Colorado Rockies fan Mabel Miyasaka, 92, left, gets a fist pump from Chicago Cubs fan Alex Marvin, right, during a game against the Chicago Cubs at Coors Field in Denver on May 9, 2017.

Newman: Annoying, but also perhaps a reverence that Rockies fans can aspire to. Sure, the Chicago franchise has over a century head start, but the continued high home attendance in Colorado’s 27th year tells me the Rockies’ fanbase is just starting to tap into its own intensity. Maybe, in another 75 years or so after Denver has grown even more over-populated and expensive, it will be the Coloradans becoming the transplants and invading major league stadiums across the country in their vintage Arenado jerseys. It’s a slow simmer, Kiz.

Kiz: I’m not certain if it’s American, much less legal, to actually ban Cubs fans from 20th and Blake. But it’s OK to heckle them, especially the bandwagon-jumpers. They’re easy to recognize. The middle-aged guy who takes his styling tips from manager Joe Maddon. The young hipster that didn’t know Kris Bryant from Kobe Bryant until purchasing a replica jersey. A ban? No. But I suggest this: Anyone wearing Cubs gear must pay double for every beer at a Rockies game.

Newman: Double-priced beers sounds a bit excessive — let’s save that card for anyone wearing Dodgers paraphernalia when divisional rival Los Angeles comes back to LoDo later this month. To counter the sea of Cubs fans flowing through the gates, Coors Field’s social butterflies need to get mean. Bust out loud boos with regularity. Quickly quash any “Let’s go Cubs” chants. And, in the name of the baseball gods: No wave this series. Real Rockies fans can’t let Cubs transplants think that’s actually how we behave at baseball games in this city.

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