| The Waiting is the Hardest Part Scott Childers - Tuesday, July 18, 2006 The start of the 2006 season is on the horizon, but from the looks of it, the Maize and Blue faithful are already in midseason doubting form... |
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My good friend Tom Petty likes to say that the waiting is the hardest part. Ok, I actually don’t know Tom Petty, but I did see him last year and that should at least count for something. As another season of I mention this because there’s a disturbing trend that’s becoming more and more a yearly occurrence, and I’m not referring to our team’s performance on the gridiron. There appears to be a large portion of the Well, actually, part of this is a good thing; it means that people are realizing what Phil so effectively underscored in his most recent article regarding expectations. More and more This line of thinking is particularly prevalent at this point in the year. Now that the spring games and practices have passed, the doldrums of summer bring out the annual ritual of previews and predictions that make every college football fan prick his or her ears up when someone so much as utters their favorite team’s name. These subjective and all-too-often inaccurate breakdowns of teams most people haven’t seen play a single snap of football are almost always taken way too seriously and given way too much weight. Is it a fun way to pass the off-season? Certainly. Does a preview that says X and Y about your team mean that those things are bound to happen? Of course not. What amazes me is the way many of the reviews of our Wolverines take the assumption of mediocrity before anyone has so much as seen this team set foot on the field: “When was the last time this team lived up to expectations?” What amazes me even more is the way that many What many people might not see is that this is the easiest possible position to take, the burden of proof lies not with those who think this team will go 8-4 because “it always does,” but rather with those who seem to think that this football team is capable of doing more than that. The pessimistic (proponents of this type of reasoning blithely call it “realism”) fan prefers not to be the one who gets their hopes up, but rather be converted by the team’s sudden improvement in performance. A lot of posts have been made with the following words included: “until they show me otherwise” or “unless I see something vastly different”. Now then, I’m not one who puts tons of stock in the idea of group karma, but then again, sports are kind of funny that way. Crowds influence games, especially in football. Fan bases can have a large affect on the attitude of a team, and I think the attitude of a team can make a huge difference in how they perform on the field. I’m not arguing that everyone should think this team is going to be undefeated this season, not in the least, but is it too much to ask that perhaps as fans we go into this season with the idea that it is possible for this team to turn it around? I can understand how the attitude begins to build, I’ve been right there to watch the losses to lesser teams, the crushing losses to key rivals and in BIG bowl games. The underachieving nature of this team when it matters most over the past few seasons has made the subsequent off-seasons harder and harder to endure. Naturally this has lead to this point. The encounters with opposing teams' bandwagon fans and true fans alike are becoming more and more of the same experience, and unfortunately we Our fans should be gearing up for the opportunity to show that last year was a fluke, that this team isn’t “owned” by anyone, and that Michigan football is not some once great program on it’s way out of the spotlight, but rather an elite program. We should be rallying around this team, not reading it its last rights. So next time you run into that Joe Commonfan in the store or on the street, just smile, hold your head up high, and tell him “Go Blue!” It’s part of what makes college football so great. Revel in the knowledge that when the roles are reversed, they’ll know you didn’t just buy that shirt because your team went 9-3 and beat two teams with better than .500 records… not that I’m singling any teams out here or anything. Mr. Petty was right everyone, the waiting is the hardest part, but try not to let it get you into a state of lowered expectations when all anyone wants to see is improvement from this football team. The season will get here soon enough; let’s try to look forward to it! GO BLUE! |
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