So I decided that I do need to start posting here after all those years
I can't remember when EXACTLY I started watching the Jazz, mainly because back than you couldn't control what you can watch on TV.
I'm an Israeli and I'm 30 years old. back at the beginning of the 90s, we had only three watchable TV stations: Channel 1, which is the main nationally funded station; Channel 23 (go figure why the jump to the number 23
), which is the "educational" sibling of the former station; and METV, which stand for Middle East TV and was broadcasted from Lebanon. The last one was quite awesome and was the closest thing to cable TV you could find back than. It was very up to date with a lot of movies, TV shows and sports. They used to broadcast a lot of Lakers and Knicks basketball, but with the Jazz being the closest thing to European basketball, they broadcasted some Jazz games as well. So I was a thin 3rd grader who just started playing and watching basketball when I first saw the Jazz playing. I remembered some Jazz players, especially Malone, Stockton and Eaton. Fast forward to double Finals trips, where I was lucky enough to watch some next day re-runs of the finals. By than I could define myself as a junior Jazz fan, while it was largely unpopular... the Bulls where very dominant in Israel.
I think I became a true Jazz fan when I started playing NBA Live 2000 on PC. It didn't take me too long to know everything about each player, and starting to regularly following the Jazz via the internet and occasionally broadcasted games on NBA TV, which was part of the sports package on cable TV. When Stockton retired I was in the Army. I remember sitting in my tank (I was a gun loader) when the driver, a good friend and a diehard Lakers friend broke me the news about Malone. I was furious! Strangely enough though, I was quite fond of that year's team... When I finished my army service in late 2004, I started to watch a lot of live games. I started adjusting my working shifts at a local gas station so I could watch every Jazz games that was being broadcasted in Israel. When I started working as a security officer during my university years (2006-2009), I was working A LOT of night shifts - If I was awake in the middle of the night watching games, I might as well make some money out of it.... During those years, around 2007, I discovered Jazzfanz. It became part of my daily internet routine - check the news (we are news addicts in Israel), check my email, check Jazzfanz and than the rest of the net.
Nowadays, I'm an primary school teacher, meaning I can rarely watch live games anymore. I do watch re-runs via the wonderful, yet expensive, international NBA League Pass.
So,
What is your story?

I can't remember when EXACTLY I started watching the Jazz, mainly because back than you couldn't control what you can watch on TV.
I'm an Israeli and I'm 30 years old. back at the beginning of the 90s, we had only three watchable TV stations: Channel 1, which is the main nationally funded station; Channel 23 (go figure why the jump to the number 23

I think I became a true Jazz fan when I started playing NBA Live 2000 on PC. It didn't take me too long to know everything about each player, and starting to regularly following the Jazz via the internet and occasionally broadcasted games on NBA TV, which was part of the sports package on cable TV. When Stockton retired I was in the Army. I remember sitting in my tank (I was a gun loader) when the driver, a good friend and a diehard Lakers friend broke me the news about Malone. I was furious! Strangely enough though, I was quite fond of that year's team... When I finished my army service in late 2004, I started to watch a lot of live games. I started adjusting my working shifts at a local gas station so I could watch every Jazz games that was being broadcasted in Israel. When I started working as a security officer during my university years (2006-2009), I was working A LOT of night shifts - If I was awake in the middle of the night watching games, I might as well make some money out of it.... During those years, around 2007, I discovered Jazzfanz. It became part of my daily internet routine - check the news (we are news addicts in Israel), check my email, check Jazzfanz and than the rest of the net.
Nowadays, I'm an primary school teacher, meaning I can rarely watch live games anymore. I do watch re-runs via the wonderful, yet expensive, international NBA League Pass.
So,
What is your story?