If you’re a New England Patriots fan, you’re happy. Every other fan base has some level of discontent.

A Los Angeles Rams fan’s discontent isn’t the same as what an Arizona Cardinals fan is feeling these days, but nobody’s happy. Except the champs (and the way Patriots fans treat every NFL story like a personal persecution is strange, though that’s a story for another day).

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But some fan bases are really unhappy. It might be that they have experienced no real success in decades. Or there has been a string of horrible decisions by management. Maybe the ownership situation is untenable. For some teams it might be all of that, and more.

Which fan base is the most disgruntled? Here’s a ranking of the five fan bases that wake up the angriest:

There are a lot of fan bases that barely missed the cut, for various reasons. Cleveland Browns fans are too excited these days to make the top five. Oakland Raiders fans aren’t disgruntled, they’re generally delusional. Raiders fans all seem to believe every year is the year they’re going 14-2 and can talk themselves into it (for a window into their mindset, have a Raiders fan you know share their “the Bears didn’t win a playoff game so the Raiders won the Khalil Mack trade” theory ... you can’t be disgruntled when you’re optimistic to the point of insanity). Denver Broncos fans are angry about various missteps, but they need to calm down: Denver won a Super Bowl three years ago. Miami Dolphins fans have a lot to complain about, but life is good because they live in Miami. Tampa Bay Buccaneers fans should be mad about the Jameis Winston roller-coaster, but they don’t have quite as much to complain about as, say, Lions fans.

There have been two notable cases of an all-time great player stepping away at least in part because of the team’s losing ways, and they were Barry Sanders and Calvin Johnson. The Lions have won one playoff game since 1957, and that came at the end of the 1991 season. Now they have to put their faith in Matt Patricia, who didn’t exactly come off as the most likable face of the franchise in his first year.

The draft didn’t help. They took Iowa tight end T.J. Hockenson with the seventh pick, which might not be bad, but it conjured up memories of passing up Odell Beckham and Aaron Donald in 2014 to take tight end Eric Ebron (who had 13 touchdowns last season in Indianapolis ... after posting 11 in four years with the Lions). Then came the second-round pick, Hawaii linebacker Jahlani Tavai, who was far down most draft lists, and a “Jahlani Who?” Free Press headline that summed it up.

Some times the Lions give you exactly what you expect, and sometimes they give you a "WTJ" moment -- "What the Jahlani?" From Saturday's @freepsports, the great work from @davebirkett, @seideljeff, @tanitaMXTX, @danalegriajr, @cmonarrez and more! pic.twitter.com/CCldWaOA7O — Ryan Ford (@theford) April 27, 2019

There’s not much reason for Lions fans to hope, because they’ve never experienced hope before.

Lions fans are certainly disgruntled, assuming all their feelings haven’t been entirely beat out of them yet.

Jets fans kind of live in the disgruntled zone. Let’s be honest, have you ever met a happy Jets fan? Me neither.

Seeing the Giants have plenty of Super Bowl success, and then the Patriots put together one of the greatest dynasties in American professional sports history (with a coach the Jets had for like four minutes before he resigned) will do funny things to one’s psyche.

They’d be higher on this list, but there actually is hope instead of reasons to be gruntled. Quarterback Sam Darnold showed promise as a rookie last year. Jamal Adams is a great safety. The Jets might have gotten the best player in this year’s draft with defensive tackle Quinnen Williams. The Jets were more competitive last season than most figured.

There’s at least some hope for better days for a franchise that hasn’t been to a Super Bowl since Joe Namath guaranteed victory. Especially with the chance that the Patriots will eventually step back when Tom Brady retires.

And if the Jets fall apart and have to start all over, it’s not like their fans will be any more frustrated than they’ve been for the past 50 years or so.