I had a short stint at Aberdeen Proving Grounds- Edgewood Arsenal, working at the Institute of Chemical Defense (ICD). I was there for nine months in 1984-85. And while it is outside of Baltimore, I always considered the whole DC-Baltimore corridor just one big place. As a matter of fact, I spent more of my free time in DC rather than in Baltimore. I was at the Smithsonian constantly. That said, even back then I had at least heard of George Mason. They got some press and it was long before their recent run. On the flipside, outside of a mention here or there, you rarely read anything about Towson State. For those unfamiliar with the area, Towson State `was literally a stone's throw from where I was at. They were treated like a community college, if that.
I have no idea how things are today for GM, but I do know what the overall sports scene is there. In a nutshell, Ace Dad is right, and if you haven't spent any appreciable time there, you wouldn't understand. This is a pro sports area. Period. And I'm not talking about how pro sports are treated in Kansas City, St Louis or even Dallas. It is ten times magnified on the East Coast! Out there, pro sports are the alpha and omega. They are the reason people breathe. People are still butt hurt about Colts leaving. And they are upset on a level most can't even comprehend. It's not just football, although the Redskins were the biggest thing then, it's MLB, the NHL, the NBA and even pro soccer. They have professional laccrosse as well! They have everything, all the time and it is all about being big league. On top of that, it really wasn't just the teams in DC and Baltimore, it was New York, Philly and more. The fans mix and match, city to city- and with passion. People commute three hours each way for work, a three hour commute to see a ballgame is no big deal. It is nothing for fans to jump on a train, connect to the subway and hit a road game without touching a car. There was a guy in my office that was a huge Yankees fan and he made it to at least one game every homestand. This is a pro sports area like no other and George Mason getting any attention is a huge accomplishment. 6,000 fans is a big deal.
On the flipside, I was stationed in San Diego for the bulk of 2 years. San Diego, and Los Angeles for that matter, are horrible sports towns, college or professional. The Chargers did pretty well, but the Padres only draw when they are winning, and even then, they don't draw all that well. The Clippers left San Diego during this time, nobody attended Clippers games. In LA, they like the Lakers, that's about it. USC has been the flavor of the past few years, but a little probabtion will kill what they had. Fans in SoCal are bad. They don't care, they aren't passionate. Sure, there are two MLB and two NBA franchises in LA, but the city is large enough to support four each! They can't even get it together enough to get a single NFL team and they have lackluster support for their hockey team. This in a metro of 13,000,000!