Article Unpacking What It Means to Be—or Not Be—A Fan Irene I. van Driel 1 , Walter Gantz 2 , and Nicky Lewis 3 Abstract Sports fanship is a multidimensional concept. Fans are fans for a variety of reasons and show their fanship in an assortment of ways. In many studies, sports fanship is based on predetermined categories and closed-ended questions set by researchers. Such categories and questions may include certain types of fans while omitting others. This study assessed the extent to which closed-ended categorizations align with fans’ views of their own fanship. It also captured what it means to be—or not be—a sports fan from the respondent’s perspective. A total of 1,093 adults completed questionnaires using Amazon’s Mechanical Turk. In response to a dichotomous choice question, roughly half self-reported as fans. A majority of self- identified fans described strong emotional and personal ties with sports. Most nonfans found little connection with sports: Sports were boring and inconsistent with how they defined themselves. Open-ended responses from a small proportion of fans and a larger subset of nonfans call into question the validity of a single, dichotomous choice measure of fanship. The results of this study document the importance of explicit conceptualizations and operationalizations of sports fanship. Keywords survey, media, sports fanship, open-ended, sports 1 Department of Strategic Communication, College of Communication, Butler University, Indianapolis, IN, USA 2 Communication Science, Media School, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN, USA 3 Department of Communication, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY, USA Corresponding Author: Irene I. van Driel, Amsterdam School of Communication Research, University of Amsterdam, Postbus 15793, 1001 NG Amsterdam. Email: ivandrie@butler.edu Communication & Sport 1-19 ª The Author(s) 2018 Article reuse guidelines: sagepub.com/journals-permissions DOI: 10.1177/2167479518800659 journals.sagepub.com/home/com