Sports Bar entertainment in North America
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A
Gym
This popular sports bar for men is nothing like the rowdy straight sports bars that pepper Midtown side streets. Here the decor is classy – wide-plank wooden floors, high ceilings and a long, sleek bar – the men are polite and ice-skating championships are just as popular as basketball playoffs. The downstairs Locker Room is cozy and intimate, with DJs, drinking games and low lighting.
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B
Alice Cooperstown
This beer hall really is the original shock rocker's (and Phoenix resident's) baby. Cooperstown is a play on Alice Cooper's name and the real location of the Baseball Hall of Fame. On game days it floods with giddy sports lovers toasting their teams. For music fans, rock-and-roll memorabilia covers the walls.
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C
Fours
Boasting all sports, all the time, the Fours makes a great place to appreciate Bostonians’ near-fanatical obsession with sporting events. The large two-level bar was established in 1976 and retains a dash of character from that period. In addition to the game of your choice, admire a jersey collection and loads of pictures depicting legendary events in Boston’s sporting past.
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D
Ugly Mug
The Mug’s typical of the dives in this part of town: kinda grotty, but self-consciously so, attracting an interesting mix of preppie Hill-rats, Marines from the nearby barracks and Capitol Hill locals. The predominating crowd is usually pretty loud and raucous, making this the 8th St SE option for those wanting a bit more frattish ambience.
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E
West End Johnnies
Despite the black leather furniture and big picture windows, this West End venue cannot escape the fact that it’s a sports bar, with flatscreen TVs and sports paraphernalia adorning the walls. But it’s a sports bar for grown-ups, with a good wine list and cocktail selection and tasty food.
Attention brunchies: JC's corned-beef hash and eggs and live reggae music make for an excellent way to recover from your Saturday night.
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F
Tap Room
A favorite stop on the Vail bar-hopping circuit, this laid-back sports bar shows ballgames all day and has a giant selection of beers and day-long drink specials. The kitchen churns out middling pub grub, but the chipped-wood bar is a fine place to sip a Native Z draft. Plus, they have views of the mountain from the back patio. Wifi too.
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G
Rhino Bar & Pump House
This is a good spot to see Hoyas behaving badly – a college-age crowd checks its inhibitions at the door here most weekends. DJs play dance music on weekends, and the scene gets crazy in an undergrad kinda way, but for the rest of the week this is pretty much the bar for watching sports and downing wings in the Georgetown area.
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H
Chez Serge
Hockey games, unbridled kitsch and a mechanical bull reel in neighborhood kids, jocks and sports fans hankering for the bells and whistles of the sports arena – without actually being there. With cold beer, flashing lights and dancing staff, this homey bar gets out of control during hockey and soccer seasons.
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I
Lazy Dog Sports Bar & Grill
'Gourmet food. Gourmet sports.' That's the motto here, but our money is on the beer and upstairs patio. When the big screens get a game that people care about the place goes off, but at other times it's all about platters of nachos and the leafy overlook of the Pearl Street Mall.
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J
Standings Bar
Why is it always the little guy that makes the biggest plays? If you have to see a game, this step-in/step-out, box-like bar has a wall of TV screens, updated season standings on chalkboards, changing microbrews on tap, and free stuff (pizza on Friday, bagels on Sunday).
reviewed
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K
Nevada Smith’s
New York’s greatest soccer bar gets filled with European expats and other assorted fist-pumping adult males in sports jerseys. Some 100 matches get played a week on the wall-to-wall flat-screen TVs (just past the signed jersey of Ronaldinho). There’s beer, too.
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L
Bleacher Bar
Tucked under the bleachers at Fenway Park, this classy bar offers a view onto center field (go Jacoby baby!). It’s not the best place to watch the game, as the place gets packed, but it’s an awesome way to experience America’s oldest ballpark, even when the Sox are not playing.
If you want a seat in front of the window, get your name on the waiting list an hour or two before game time; once seated, diners have 45 minutes in the hot seat.
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M
Ted's Hideaway
Somewhere in the Florida panhandle is a bumpin', fabulous gay club, which clearly switched places with Ted's, a no-nonsense, pool table and sports-showin' 'lounge' smack in the middle of SoFi's elegance.
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N
Ferg's Sports Bar & Grill
Next to Tropicana Field, this huge sports bar with lots of outdoor and deck seating is the place to be before, during or after a Tampa Bay Rays baseball game, or really for any televised sporting event.
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O
Cask 'n' Flagon
Boston’s iconic sports bar has long served the Fenway faithful and it occupies a conspicuous site opposite the Green Monster. What this means, particularly for those who are lucky and early enough to score a pregame sidewalk seat at the Cask’n Flagon, is that you’ll have a prime spot from which to watch Lansdowne St reach its frenzied best. It is also a popular destination for Red Sox fans watching away games.
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On the Rocks
Deep in mid-Miami Beach, this may be the only Cuban-Sports-Seedy-Dive-Bar we've visited in the USA.
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ESPN Club
Food, drinks and so many TVs screening the hottest game that even in the bathroom you won't miss a single play.
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